looking for advice on RestoreX usage for my plaque

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VentosP

Hi everyone! I hope you're all doing well, and that your penises are in good health! :)

Some time ago, I purchased RestoreX and began doing traction exercises, following advice from this helpful forum as well as by the user manual of the device.

The issue I'm facing, and I'd appreciate your help with, is as follows:
I have a main plaque located near the base of the penis, with a distance from the tip of the penis to the curvature of approximately 8.5 cm from the beginning of the glans (my curvature is to the left side). When I try to use RestoreX by turning it to the right (the opposite direction), I can't seem to generate traction right over the area of the plaque, as it remains far behind the pivot point.

I've read the manual, and the recommendations there still suggest using the stop at 60° and that traction will work fine anyway:

QuoteWhat if my curvature is further back on the penis than the point of bending? This is acceptable. In a clinical trial evaluating RestoreX, curvatures that were closer to the body responded just as well as those that were directly over the point of bending. Bending is important because it allows more force to be applied to the direction of curvature than other areas of the penis. If the distance from the Penis Tip to the curvature of your penis is greater than 4 inches, only use the first or second stop (30° of 60°). Limiting the angle of opposite force will increase the tension applied to the disease location.

Nevertheless, I still have doubts if the traction will be enough for the treatment to make sense and work the same.

I don't want to subject my penis to possible injuries, or even worse, generate new fibrous plaques in other areas of my penis.

Below, I'm posting photos to make my doubt more evident:

In the following photo I'm doing what's recommended by the manual (or I think so), bringing my penis to the second stop (60° angle) of torsion, maintaining Position 1. You can see in the white arrow where my fibrous plaque is located:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1JVcJm-fKUvZWqCtleFWD7O41Mos-ymq9/view?usp=sharing

In contrast, in the following photo, I've tried an alternative which would be to put the screw in position 3 to extend more the penis in the upper area, trying to reach further down (my penis is small -.-).

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mJGY1CZPkErrpSmr-7EWpic5bXu4kcdT/view?usp=sharing

I would like to have your opinions on which method you think is more efficient of both and if anyone had these same doubts could help me find the best method to use RestoreX as efficiently as possible, without causing harm to the penis in the process.

Awaiting your opinions, thank you very much in advance
...and sorry for my basic english (I'm native spanish)
I don't remember when my Peyronie started. But I've been dealing with it for at least 5 years now.
I only try with cialis and acetyl l-carnitine (without improvements)
I have a curvature to the left side (of around 40º)
I'm currently 42 years old

Lostand Looking24

23
Symptoms at 22
Diagnosed
Curve to the right that fluctuates between 20-30 degrees and indentation. Indent is exactly where the curve is.
No palpable plaque. When fully erect, the curve sight/indentation is softer than the rest of the erection.

MrDoh

I noticed in the pictures that you have quite a bit of exposed length of the black bars showing. You would get more traction force if you make that exposed length much shorter. That is, pull the body of the traction device more clicks away from your body before you release the springs by pushing the body of the device towards you. Even though you can't see the white rings on the black bars, the traction force gets weaker as more of the bars are exposed (the springs become more extended). Kind of intuitive if you think about springs exerting more force the more compressed they are.

And you'll feel the difference when you start with about the shortest exposed length of the black bars that you can get.

Not sure if this makes sense to anyone else, hard to explain without a picture.  
77 years old
Married
Started 5 - 10 years ago
Bend to the left, bend upwards, no pain
RestoreX only

Mikel7

Quote from: MrDoh on May 13, 2024, 04:20:54 AMI noticed in the pictures that you have quite a bit of exposed length of the black bars showing. You would get more traction force if you make that exposed length much shorter. That is, pull the body of the traction device more clicks away from your body before you release the springs by pushing the body of the device towards you. Even though you can't see the white rings on the black bars, the traction force gets weaker as more of the bars are exposed  

Yes what MrDoh has stated.
Lump 4/2020, age 63 , Dr Levine 6-26-20, Dors Curve 11/2020, Peyronies
Vit E400mg, COQ10, Heat Therapy, Penimaster, Pentox, Cialis, Restorex
SNHL 7/2020 - Stopped all Meds because ototoxicity  Heat/traction/VED are working. CPPS Diagnosis - Stable :)