Fraction Finder Reviews

I see you keep regurgitating the same nonsense. You are great at coping and pasting from Google to attempt to explain what you have while confusing customers in circles and not actually saying anything at all…

Your sensor absolutely shows nothing. You are super imposing a reading from the screen as interpreted data that can be used. It’s not. The only data you have avail is the continuous blockage of light or less blockage of light. Manipulation of light waves as blockages that determine what you are seeing either is or isn’t flowing over the sensor is what you are capturing as data. Anybody with basic understanding with spd sees through your claims of identification. You are super imposing a result that isn’t happening with your explanation trying to confuse people one by one over and over.

All you claim to have is a correlated light signature with radiant colorometry to chemical data. What you actually have is anecdotal evidence that isn’t factual. It’s only represented as a semi visual interpretation but with no actual corelated data behind it. The reason is because you need to actually own and opperate a high end analytical colorometry data compiler to run against your NON CALIBRATED - NON NIST OFFERED davinci. This means every reading you have from your unit live you should be putting through a master device to reference the data either way. Meaning not every customer will even remotely mirror sensor results unless it’s calibrated to a standard. Wich it isn’t.

You have been embelishing about the features and function of your device since you’ve seen me release mine before you. It is a basic colorometry device. What you intend to do with it and what you explain it can do is clearly not true if anyone looks at your charts you have posted.

The data from the davinci is marginaly 1% more than your eyes can see, and 1-2% of what the fraction finder collectively offers.

The FF can be set up to see anything. You find the desired uv spec you want. You type it in, name it and it can see it. There’s no limit. @Apothecary36