AN INVESTIGATION
I Spent 90 Days Investigating ApexDrive Pro Before I Spent a Dime On It. Here's Everything I Found.
Skeptical engineer, married 28 years, four years of ED. Here's what 47 pages of notes taught me about at-home shockwave therapy — and why I almost made an expensive mistake at a men's health clinic.
47 pages of notes. 12 peer-reviewed studies. Three clinic quotes and eight phone interviews. Here's the desk where I worked it out.
IF YOU'RE SHORT ON TIME
I'm a 56-year-old mechanical engineer who spent four years on Viagra before things stopped working — and another three months investigating one specific device before I bought it.
If you've tried pills, considered the $4,000–$6,000 in-clinic shockwave packages, or quietly looked into injections and thought "not yet" — you're probably exactly where I was eight months ago.
This is what I learned. I wrote it because I wish someone had written it for me.
Why I Wrote This
I'm not a doctor. I'm not affiliated with any company. I'm a 56-year-old mechanical engineer who spent four years on Viagra before things stopped working — and another three months investigating one specific device before I bought it.
If you've tried pills, considered the $4,000–$6,000 in-clinic shockwave packages, or quietly looked into injections and thought "not yet" — you're probably exactly where I was eight months ago.
This is what I learned. I wrote it because I wish someone had written it for me.
Forty-seven pages, all in blue ink. I've never spent this long deciding on a $400 purchase.
The Question Every Man Over 50 Is Quietly Asking
Here's my situation, briefly:
- 56 years old, married 28 years
- Started losing reliable firmness around age 51
- Viagra worked at 50mg. Then I needed 100mg. Then 100mg started giving me migraines and only half-working
- My urologist's next move was injections. My wife's face when I told her told me everything
I'd been seeing ads for ApexDrive Pro for months. Like most men my age, my first reaction was: "$400 sex toy with a science-y story attached. Acoustic waves at home? Sure."
But the same product kept coming up in three forums I'd been quietly reading for two years. So I did what engineers do when something keeps showing up on the radar. I investigated.
The morning routine I built around a 45-minute window. Spontaneity was the first thing pills cost me.
The 90-Day Investigation
Here's exactly what I did before I spent a dollar:
Read 12 peer-reviewed studies on Low-Intensity Extracorporeal Shockwave Therapy (Li-ESWT) for ED, including the original Israeli trials from 2010 and the European follow-ups
Spent six hours on the phone with three men's health clinics — two in my state, one in Florida — to get full quotes on in-clinic shockwave protocols
Interviewed eight men who'd actually used ApexDrive — six by phone, two by email. Two of them had returned it. I asked them why
Watched every long-form review on YouTube where the reviewer disclosed (or didn't disclose) their affiliation
Talked to my own urologist twice — once about the technology in general, once specifically about ApexDrive
Compared the ApexDrive specs side-by-side against the clinic device my urologist owns
If that sounds obsessive — fair. But I was about to either spend $5K at a clinic or get sent down the path toward an implant. I needed to know.
What I Found: The Science
This is where my skepticism collapsed.
The mechanism is medically real. Li-ESWT is the same technology used in over 40 clinical studies for ED, going back to 2010. The European Association of Urology lists it as an emerging therapy. It's not a wellness gimmick. Clinics charge $400 to $650 per session for the same underlying technology — six sessions standard.
And here's the part that finally made everything click for me:
Viagra and Cialis don't fix anything. They force blood through arteries that are getting steadily worse. That's why your dose keeps climbing — your circulation is deteriorating underneath the pill. The pill is just working harder against a bigger problem each year.
Acoustic wave therapy does the opposite. The pulses pass through tissue and fracture calcified microplaque deposits sitting inside the tiny vessels of penile tissue. These are the deposits no pill can reach. Once they're cleared, the tissue rebuilds itself — new micro-vessels grow, the venous seal tightens, the tunica regains its elasticity.
It's not chemistry forcing more blood. It's mechanical clearance of what was blocking the blood in the first place.
And it's why men in clinical trials report sustained results 6–12 months after finishing a treatment course — not "until the next dose."
Mechanical clearance of calcified microplaque inside the tiny vessels — the deposits the pill can't reach. Once cleared, the tissue rebuilds itself.
Same therapy. Same energy type. Different price tag. The only real difference is who profits.
— My urologist, after I pushed on the off-label question
Why Your Urologist Probably Hasn't Recommended This
This is the conversation that genuinely made me a little angry.
I asked my urologist directly: "Does shockwave therapy work for ED?"
His answer, paraphrased: "It can work for the right patient. We offer it here. Six sessions, $3,900."
Then I asked: "What about at-home devices?"
His tone shifted. "I can't recommend those. They're not FDA-approved for ED."
So I pushed: "Is the in-clinic version FDA-approved for ED?"
Long pause. "It's used off-label."
Same therapy. Same energy type. Different price tag. The only real difference is who profits.
I'm not anti-doctor. I'm pro-information. But here's the structural reality nobody likes to say out loud:
- Li-ESWT isn't a prescription drug — no pharmaceutical company markets it to physicians
- In-clinic shockwave is a high-margin revenue stream for a practice
- An at-home device is a one-time $400–$500 purchase that cuts the clinic out entirely
- No insurance billing code. No drug rep. No medical school curriculum. No incentive to educate doctors
Doctors aren't lying to you. They simply have a financial reason to recommend the version they own the machine for.
The clinic machine and the at-home device. No insurance billing code, no drug rep, no medical school curriculum — no incentive to educate doctors about the cheaper one.
My Three Options, Side-By-Side
$8,640 ($240/mo)
$400–$500 one-time
$2,400–$3,900 (6 sessions)
Same therapy at home
No — forces blood past damage
✓ Yes — clears microplaque
No — until next dose
✓ 6–12 months in trials
Migraines, stuffy nose, red face
✓ Zero serious events
45-minute lead time
✓ No pre-planning
Pay anyway, escalate
✓ 90-day money-back
My personal numbers. Generic sildenafil at my dose: $240/month, $2,880/year. ApexDrive paid for itself in two months.
The Five Problems With What I Was Already Doing
I sat down and made a list of every cost I'd been absorbing for three years on pills. It got long.
The dependency problem. I couldn't initiate intimacy without a 45-minute lead time. My wife knew that. Spontaneity was gone. Date nights stopped feeling like date nights and started feeling like medical appointments.
The cost problem. Generic sildenafil at my dose: $240/month. $2,880/year. $8,640 over three years. The clinic shockwave package would have paid for itself in 16 months. ApexDrive paid for itself in two.
The side effect problem. Migraines bad enough that I dreaded date night. Stuffy nose for hours afterward. A red face that made my wife worry I was going to have a heart attack.
The escalation problem. 25mg, then 50mg, then 100mg. My urologist said injections were next. Then implant surgery. None of those were going to fix anything either — they were going to push harder against a problem that was still getting worse underneath.
The performance problem. Even when the pill worked, I'd go flat halfway through about a third of the time. That's not a chemistry problem. That's a structural problem in the tissue. No pill fixes structure.
When I wrote out that list, I realized I'd been running an escalating maintenance program on a body that was getting worse. Not solving anything. Just paying more to delay the inevitable.
My Personal Results — Including The Parts That Don't Sound Great
I bought ApexDrive Pro after 90 days of research. I've now used it for 11 weeks. Here's the truth, including what doesn't make for a glowing review:
What it isn't: Not magic. Not fast. Not fun to use — it's a 15-minute therapy routine three times a week, and you have to actually do it. The two guys I interviewed who returned it both quit before week 4.
What it is: The first thing I've tried in four years that actually addressed the cause instead of just forcing past the symptom for another night.
11 weeks, three sessions a week, 15 minutes each. I kept the bad weeks in the log too — that's how I knew the trend was real.
My Week-By-Week Log
WEEK 1
Felt like nothing.
Mild tapping sensation. I genuinely thought I'd wasted $400. Read a forum post that said "give it three weeks before you decide" and forced myself to keep going.
WEEKS 2–3
Morning erections came back.
The first time I noticed I felt confused — I genuinely couldn't remember the last time that had happened on its own. I assumed it was a coincidence. Then it happened again two days later.
WEEKS 4–6
Wife noticed before I told her.
Firmness during sex started holding longer. The "going flat halfway through" pattern broke. Not every time. But the consistency shifted enough that my wife noticed before I said anything. I didn't tell her what I was doing until week 5. She thought I'd changed my medication.
WEEKS 7–9
Two encounters without a pill.
First time in three years.
WEEK 11 (NOW)
Haven't taken a pill in five weeks.
I still keep Cialis in the drawer as a backup. But I haven't used it in five weeks. My morning baseline is closer to what I remember from my early 40s than from last year.
The first thing I've tried in four years that actually addressed the cause instead of just forcing past the symptom for another night.
— Week 11, my notebook
Who I'd Tell To Try This
Be honest with yourself about whether this matches your situation:
You're 40+ and your ED has gotten progressively worse over the last 2 to 5 years
Your pill dose has climbed, or pills don't work as reliably as they used to
You've gotten a clinic shockwave quote and the price made you flinch
You don't want injections. You really don't want surgery
You'd rather address the cause than keep pushing past it
You value privacy — at-home over a waiting room
You can commit to 15 minutes, three times a week, for 8 weeks
If your ED is primarily psychological (you're under 40 and stressed), or you have severe nerve damage from prostate surgery, set expectations differently. The studies are clear that this works best for vasculogenic ED — the kind caused by circulatory and structural problems, which is the most common type after 40.
My Recommendation
The 90-day money-back guarantee is what got me over the line. I figured if the studies were right, I'd know by day 60. If they were wrong, I'd return it.
If you've been on pills for years, watching them stop working, and you've been quietly putting off the next conversation with your urologist — this is what I'd try before doing anything more drastic.
Worst case, you return it. Best case, you stop spending $240/month forever and get something back that you didn't think was coming back.
$400 sex toy with a science-y story attached. Acoustic waves at home? Sure.
My exact first reaction. Then the same product kept coming up in three forums I'd been quietly reading for two years. So I did what engineers do when something keeps showing up on the radar. The Li-ESWT mechanism is real — 40+ clinical studies going back to 2010, and the European Association of Urology lists it as an emerging therapy.
If it actually worked, my urologist would have told me.
I asked him. He said the in-clinic version costs $3,900 for six sessions. When I asked about at-home, his tone shifted: "not FDA-approved." When I asked if the in-clinic version was FDA-approved, long pause: "It's used off-label." Same therapy. Different price tag. I'm not anti-doctor — I'm pro-information.
What if I waste $400 and it does nothing?
Week 1, I genuinely thought I had. Mild tapping sensation, no change. That's why I focused on the 90-day money-back guarantee — that's 12 weeks to decide, which is the full clinical protocol plus buffer. Two of the eight men I interviewed returned theirs and got refunded.
Is this just an affiliate review? Be honest.
Fair question. There's a link in this post — if you buy through it, I get a small referral credit. I would've written this either way. The eight guys I interviewed had zero incentive to talk to me, and four of them I found through a forum, not a brand list. I kept the bad-week notes in on purpose.
90-Day Guarantee
Full protocol plus buffer
Ships "NS Logistics"
No brand on label
40+ Clinical Studies
Li-ESWT, peer-reviewed
15 min · 3× a week
8-week home protocol
Get ApexDrive Pro — Risk-Free for 90 Days
ApexDrive Pro is currently 60% off plus free shipping for new customers, plus the 90-day money-back guarantee that made me willing to take the chance.
Get ApexDrive Pro — Risk-Free for 90 DaysFirst-time customers only.
Q&A — Real Questions From Men Who've Asked Me About This
From the comments thread on the original post.
Daniel K.VERIFIED BUYER:
Robert, did it hurt? "Shockwave" sounded aggressive to me.
Same concern I had. It doesn't hurt. It feels like a firm tapping or pressure — closer to a percussion massager than anything sharp. I run it at level 4 of 10.
Greg S.:
How loud is it? My wife is in the next room half the time.
Quieter than my electric razor. Closed door, she's never heard it.
Marcus T.:
Why does it ship "NS Logistics"?
Discreet packaging. The shipping label doesn't mention the brand. Arrived looking like any Amazon-style box.
Eric H.:
How long until I'd actually need to commit?
Forums and clinical timelines both suggest 8 weeks for most men. The 90-day guarantee gives you 12 weeks to decide — that's a full protocol plus buffer.
Anonymous:
Is this just an affiliate review? Be honest.
Fair question. There's a link in this post — if you buy through it, I get a small referral credit. I would've written this either way. The eight guys I interviewed had zero incentive to talk to me, and four of them I found through a forum, not a brand list.
Tom R.:
What if I have a pacemaker / blood thinner / heart condition?
Talk to your physician first. The therapy itself doesn't interact with medications (it's mechanical, not chemical), but if you have any implanted device or are on serious medication, that's a doctor conversation.