Do you use the Green Star 2000 now raw-al? Or the original 1000? And do you think they are better than the Elite? The Elite has one more step in the juicing process called "mix" phase, where supposedly the different textures from different foods can be combined to more easily extract the juice from all of them. It's about an inch of extra auger space where this happens.
Are you just now learning about the magnets and infrared in the Green Star juicers? They don't seem to do a lot to advertise them, and I don't know why they don't offer a version without them. I don't know if the deep infrared from the juicer are the same as those we get from the sun. They might be a totally different thing when produced artificially. And I don't think I would want my juice to be exposed to the sun either way.
Maybe they are right in that the infrared and magnets only make the juice better, but since I don't know, I tend to assume that anything artificial and modern is probably bad, until proven otherwise. How bad it would be, I don't know. But if these processes are there because they make the juice last for longer without spoiling, that's already a good sign to me that things are unlikely to be good. Maybe that's incorrect. But when I think infrared I think heat, and when I think heat that helps food stay unspoiled for longer, I think pasteurization. And magnets... Well, I don't think there's anything natural about that, and I honestly can't figure out why they put them there other than to mess with the iron that is inside the juice cells, which I find hard to believe would be a good idea.
Then again, I trust AV (perhaps too much), and I think if these were a problem he would've noticed them and addressed them... Or maybe not? Like I said, the manufacturers aren't particularly keen on letting you know that these things are in the juicers, how they work, and why they put them there.