Thank you so much for this video. First off, I didn't even know this device existed. Second - I would hate to buy a product that didn't work well. Third - I have got terrible, TERRIBLE PF in both feet. I've had it for years, and I have tried every possible way to reduce it. It's gotten so bad, I can't even walk a 1/4 of a mile at one time. I'm really hoping his will do the trick. Thanks, again!
@@somerandomgamer1260 Oh my gosh, it was TERRIBLE for my feet. I'm sure the device is fine, but for PF, it was a giant fail. At least, it was for MY feet. I ended up giving it to my parents, and my dad (and my nephew), specifically, use it regularly. In the end, the only thing that helped my PF has been physical therapy, and several months of it at that. It's not 100% gone, but it's much, much better. I can now walk 1-1.5m maybe once a week, which is a big improvement. The massager had 3 levels of intensity, I think it was, and it had heat. For me, even the lowest level was too hard. If you suffer from PF, I wish you the best of luck. It's miserable. I tried everything I could find except surgery. If that's you, I'd recommend PT.
@@jmr9735 mine is pretty mild for now it kind of just started happening when i got an office job and sit all day. sitting all day and standing all day both seem to aggravate it. If I walk a moderate amount and stretch/sit a moderate amount it doesnt flare up. So did the massage feel good but just irritated your PF even more or was it too painful for you to even sit through a full massage?
@@somerandomgamer1260 At first, it felt pretty good but irritated my pf. Over time, though, I couldn't even sit through a session. But, as you said, yours is fairly mild. You might have a different experience. My PF lasted for years, and the last year I did OrangeTheory, it got super bad. I constantly felt like I had spikes being driven into my heels.
When demonstrating the sound level, I would have liked you to run it in the various modes for 5 or 10 seconds each without talking. 55 dB is actually pretty loud, especially in a quiet room.
I was gifted a very expensive foot massager for my birthday and hoping it would relieve my plantar fasciitis on my right foot. Even on the lowest setting though it really hurts. Has anyone else experienced this?
I hope you can get hold of the Ogawa Omknee 2 which I had back in the Philippines, unfortunately they don’t seem to have this in the US. I feel it’s superior to every foot and calf massager in the US. I’m very sad it’s not available in the US. I hope you can get hold of one and compare with the best of what you’ve reviewed (ie most of these massagers just have 2 sets of rollers, and 1 static massage function; Omknee 2 has different combinations of massages for its 3 sets of rollers).
Thanks for posting the review ☺ do you have a comparison to how the massage is - can you compare to a sports massager near your feet, and if the bumps and nubs move around (other than around the cylinder) ? Thank you :)
I received a T.E,N.S 207070 for Christmas. When I try to see the video on your channel, I see a different video. How can I see how to use the T.E.N.S that I have?
Podiatry student here. As long as you don’t have a torn ligament, I would think it would be fine. But I don’t have imaging or a history of your injury so discussing it with a podiatrist or orthopod in person would probably be your safest option.
The Bob and Brad massager gives a better massage to the feet IMO. The human touch massager integrates the calf, which is nice and a feature that isn’t on the B&B model. Overall, I’d pick the Bob and Brad for foot massager, but if you need a calf massager, I’d look at other options.