How to Choose Conductive Gel or Radio Frequency Gel for Radio Frequency?
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Have you always used conductive gel with your radio frequency device?

I've actually seen a lot of people use conductive gel for radio frequency.
Specifically, now I'm not gonna say it's wrong to use conductive gel, the difference is radio frequency is a nonionizing electric magnetic energy, so it uses negative and positive energy.
It actually needs a different type of conductor to actually distribute the heat properly and evenly, when you use conductive gel it's going to work but not as effective as glycerin.
When you use glycerin the skin tends to get hotter than normal it tends to get hotter quicker compared to when you use conductive gel or ultrasound gel.
The only place where you do have to be a little more careful is when you're treating the face and the neck for skin tightening using radio frequency probe.
Why? Because since the face is more sensitive than the rest of the body, the skin on the face is thinner than the rest of the body then it tends to get hotter than the rest of the body.
Normally what l do is I do a little bit of radio frequency on the face with glycerin just to get the skin hot enough but not too hot and then l switch over to ultrasound gel I mean not ultrasound gel aloe Vera gel
because the skin on the face won't get too hot, and l won't burn or irritatethe skin on my clients.