
Thames Water and Severn Trent Water are still use dowsing rods to detect leaks despite scientific studies showing that the method is ineffective.
A 2017 investigation found that were regularly using water dowsing to detect leaks, that regulators should step in to stop the practice of 鈥渨itchcraft鈥 at customers鈥 cost.
快猫短视频 has now found that, more than five years later, most of the 19 companies we asked say they have officially abandoned the practice. However, Thames Water and Severn Trent Water both confirmed that their engineers still use dowsing rods.
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at Thames Water says dowsing rods are regularly used to find leaks, as well as to 鈥渘arrow down鈥 or verify results from other leak-detecting equipment.
鈥淪ome people they work for, some people they don鈥檛. If they work for you, you come to trust it,鈥 he says. 鈥淧eople are sceptical of it, and I was sceptical when I first saw it. I started using them because I saw someone else use them and I have found leaks. 鈥
While these two companies still use dowsing, 15 firms told 快猫短视频 that they no longer do, including Anglian Water, D诺r Cymru (Welsh Water), Hafren Dyfrdwy, Northumbrian Water, South West Water, Southern Water, United Utilities Water, Wessex Water, Affinity Water, Bristol Water, Portsmouth Water, South East Water, SES Water, Northern Ireland Water and Scottish Water. Yorkshire Water and South Staffs Water didn鈥檛 respond.
Dowsing is a scientifically discredited technique that has been used over centuries to search for ground water, precious minerals, metals and other objects. Dowsers use two rods or a single Y-shaped rod and walk around an area, watching for tiny movements that they say indicate a finding. But experiments have shown that .
at Goldsmiths, University of London, says the belief that dowsing is an effective method has continued despite many double-blind laboratory experiments showing that it doesn鈥檛 work.
鈥淚t鈥檚 down to the ideomotor effect, which is a posh way of saying they鈥檙e moving the dowsing rods without realising it, with unconscious muscular movements,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here are a number of other related phenomena; it鈥檚 the same thing with ouija boards.鈥
at the University of Hertfordshire, UK, says that although studies have shown that dowsing doesn鈥檛 work in laboratory tests, he would hesitate to say it is impossible that they could work in some fashion in the real world.
鈥淚t鈥檚 possible experienced dowsers are picking up cues in the environment unconsciously, and then the rods are an indication of that. So you realise that certain plants look particularly green, or you鈥檝e got certain plants growing in particular places, and maybe there鈥檚 water underneath,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hat we know is that they鈥檙e not detecting water directly, because all the lab tests have shown that they will just fail.鈥