HST-Density in The Recipient Area...
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Nope - but almost correct ...
The estimated area (pic in my previous post) is just around 0.3 cm²!
And there is still a problem involved (why just estimated):
When I want to get a real sharp photo - the USB microscope doesn't allow me not even to breath (no trembling/shaking!). So I must always press the USB micro a little bit to the skin and thereby shrinks the distance to the lense somewhat, because the head's surface is not flat and hard as the table (pic below), and the skin bends somewhat into the USB microscope, what makes the area, in fact, even smaller...so you can calculate around 35-40 grafts per complete square centimeter (cm²).
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If you have a better idea, how to figure out the proper size - let me know.Comment
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Nope - but almost correct ...
The estimated area (pic in my previous post) is just around 0.3 cm²!
And there is still a problem involved (why just estimated):
When I want to get a real sharp photo - the USB microscope doesn't allow me not even to breath (no trembling/shaking!). So I must always press the USB micro a little bit to the skin and thereby shrinks the distance to the lense somewhat, because the head's surface is not flat and hard as the table (pic below), and the skin bends somewhat into the USB microscope, what makes the area, in fact, even smaller...so you can calculate around 35-40 grafts per complete square centimeter (cm²).
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Yup, at the end of the day, it's very possible that he's not done anything sketchy in the presentation of these pics and got the density that he's calculated. However, given his history here nobody with a brain would put it past him to try and pull the wool over our eyes. He can either doctor the pic or take it with another camera with a dfferent level of zoom, we really have no way to know that the pics were taken under identical specifications and are non edited and thus represent the same surface area. It all comes down to whether or not you believe Ironman to be an honest, reliable, and non-biased source on the topic of HST, which I sure don't.Comment
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And now try the following:
Take a normal ballpoint pen, and make some normal DOTS on a sheet of paper and measure the DIAMETER of the ballpointpen-dot;
How big is the diameter of HST grafts and how big is the diameter of the holes they make into the recipient area?
How "big" is 0.5 mm diameter at all?Comment
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Now I've made 10 dots into the "proper size" with a normal ballpoint pen...
And now try the following:
Take a normal ballpoint pen, and make some normal DOTS on a sheet of paper and measure the DIAMETER of the ballpointpen-dot;
How big is the diameter of HST grafts and how big is the diameter of the holes they make into the recipient area?
How "big" is 0.5 mm diameter at all?Comment
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I took the photo below 1 week after my 1st HST procedure with my cheap DinoLite handheld video-microscope. The photo shows a small area of the forelock area, anywhere behind the hairline, and as you can see in this pic, there are around 12 implanted HST grafts in this photo: The BIG question: How big (size) is this area
*LOL*Comment
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A better way to do this would be to use Adobe Illustrator and make a 1cm square with a thin outline at 0.1pt thickness, then make a grid out of dots spaced evenly to get an idea of how many hairs should be within a 1cm square.
Here's a quick diagram I made that shows this;
If you guys want a printable PDF of this to print yourselves and get an accurate showing of density click here: http://www.sendspace.com/file/upupydComment
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