Four Years In, the Question Was Still the Same: What Is Actually in the Water?
Four years after bringing the Lourdes Hydrofix Premium Edition into his home in Utah, Chad still describes his decision in unusually precise terms. His story is not built around a dramatic promise. It is built around a more disciplined question.
What, exactly, was he putting into his body?
"I cared a lot about what I was putting into my body," Chad said.
That concern did not appear out of nowhere. Before he found Holy Hydrogen, Chad had already made significant changes in the way he approached his day-to-day wellness. He had moved into a more intentional phase of life, paying closer attention to longevity, wellness, and the tools he allowed into his routine.
He also knew something about himself. Complicated protocols did not last.
"I got more into biohacking and started doing some complicated things," he said, "but I always stopped doing them even if they were really helpful because they were complicated and they took a lot of time and the protocols were intense."
So when Chad began looking at hydrogen, he was not looking for another project. He was looking for something he could trust, something that could fit into life without becoming the center of it.
That search eventually led him to the Lourdes Hydrofix.
He Wanted the Engineering to Match the Intention
The Research-Driven Buyer
Chad came to hydrogen as a research-driven buyer. He was not simply shopping for a wellness device. He was trying to understand the category.
"As I researched all the different machines," he said, "I did deep dives."
What he found made him cautious. In his view, much of the market felt generic, inexpensive, and insufficiently documented. He saw U.S. hydrogen companies presenting themselves as premium wellness technology brands while, from his research, appearing to resell low-cost products sourced from overseas wholesale channels.
"That was a little disheartening and irritating," Chad said.
The Question That Anchored Everything
The issue was not only price. It was trust.
For Chad, the central question was not whether a machine claimed to make hydrogen. It was whether the machine could give him confidence in the water itself. He wanted to know how the hydrogen was being generated, what materials were involved, and whether the finished water was free from unwanted byproducts.
"Really, it came down to what I'm actually drinking, what is actually in the water," he said. "Is it just hydrogen or are there a bunch of byproducts in there?"
That line became the center of his evaluation.
He was not interested in a device that asked him to take marketing language on faith. He wanted documentation, engineering, and a reason to believe the machine would remain consistent over time.
The Proof Stack Changed the Conversation
Finding Holy Hydrogen
Chad found Holy Hydrogen while looking for a hydrogen machine that could meet his standards for purity, construction, and documentation.
"When I found Holy Hydrogen and did a deep dive on them," he said, "I learned that Holy Hydrogen has the marketing distribution sales rights to the Lourdes Hydrofix... and they're partnered directly with the manufacturer in Japan."
For Chad, that relationship mattered because it separated the Hydrofix from the products he had been seeing elsewhere. He was looking for a machine with a clear origin, a Japanese engineering story, and documentation that could be examined rather than merely advertised.
Documentation Over Claims
He looked into the manufacturing background, certifications, metal technology, membranes, and purity testing. What stood out was the availability of data.
"Holy Hydrogen had all the data and all the purity tests," he said.
That was the contrast he had been searching for. In a category where many products seemed to rely on claims, Holy Hydrogen was pointing him toward verification.
He also remembered being challenged to compare the Hydrofix documentation with what was available from other hydrogen machines.
"They challenged me to go look at all the different purity tests of the other hydrogen machines," Chad said, "and I couldn't find any."
That absence mattered. It made the Hydrofix feel less like another wellness product and more like the one device in the category that had been built to answer the hard questions.
Purity, Materials, and the Certificate Reinforced the Decision
The Engineering Details That Mattered
When Chad evaluated the Lourdes Hydrofix, the technical architecture mattered. The electrode material mattered. The separate-chamber electrolysis mattered. The pH-neutral output mattered. Japanese manufacturing mattered.
"All of those things were important and necessary for me," he said.
But those details all pointed back to the same concern: the purity profile of the water.
"I could make sure that what I was putting in my body was just hydrogen and nothing else," Chad said. "I didn't want to put any byproducts in it, didn't want to have electrolyzed water. I didn't want to have any chemical or metal leaching."
Thinking in Years, Not Days
That is the difference between a casual buyer and a serious evaluator. Chad was not asking only what the machine produced on day one. He was asking what would happen after years of ownership.
"When I keep using my machine for the next five years," he said, "does it eventually degrade? Does it eventually get worse? Does it eventually start leaching into the water?"
He had seen stories from other Hydrofix owners and biohackers who discussed long-term ownership and output checks, including ORP measurements. What impressed him was not a single dramatic claim. It was the idea that, after years of use, the machine was still being described as consistent and clean.
"So that matters," he said.
The Certificate That Came With the Machine
When his own unit arrived, the documentation reinforced what he had already concluded. The Lourdes Hydrofix ships with an individual certificate of authenticity showing hydrogen concentration test results for that specific machine.
"All of it reinforced the confidence," Chad said.
Less Protocol, More Trust
A Premium Instrument, Not Another Project
Chad did not describe the Hydrofix as another complicated biohacking protocol. That matters because complicated protocols were exactly what he had learned to avoid.
He had already discovered that even useful practices could fall away if they required too much time, too much structure, or too much friction. The Hydrofix appealed to him because it belonged in a different category: a premium instrument designed to fit into a life, not take it over.
"So I wanted to see what else was out there that I could easily integrate into my life," he said.
Purity Profile
For Chad, the value of the Hydrofix begins with Purity Profile. His story keeps returning to that point. He wanted confidence in what was in the water, and just as importantly, confidence in what was not in the water. The purity testing, materials, separate-chamber design, and documentation all supported that decision.
Japanese Engineering
It also rests on Japanese Engineering. Chad specifically connected his confidence to the Hydrofix's Japanese manufacturing background and to the clarity of its origin. In a market where he saw too many products with unclear origins, that clarity mattered.
Built to Last
Then there was Built to Last. Chad was already thinking beyond the first year. He had owned his Hydrofix for four years, and when he talked about the machine, his questions stretched into the next five years and beyond. Would the materials hold up? Would the output remain consistent? Would the water remain clean?
Those were not casual concerns. They were the questions of someone buying for the long term.
Certificate of Authenticity
Finally, the Certificate of Authenticity gave him a concrete proof point. The certificate did not ask Chad to trust a broad category claim. It tied the machine in front of him to its own hydrogen concentration test result.
"That was all really interesting and helpful," he said. "And it just helped me to feel good about the decision I was making."
Make Sure you Know What's in the Water
Do not stop at the word "hydrogen." Ask what is actually in the water. Ask how the machine is built. Ask whether the company can show purity testing. Ask whether the materials and design make sense for long-term use. Ask whether the device ships with documentation tied to the individual unit.
The Hydrofix did not need to become a dramatic story. It needed to become a trusted instrument.
For Chad, that was enough.