Guest guest Posted July 13, 2011 Report Share Posted July 13, 2011 Hi im new to th whole rife machine thing but I did a fair amount of research and finally bought an alex levy doug coil machine. However, on reading th manual, it states that th freq gen should always be set on sine. I was under the impression that lower freq that target diseases (I have lyme) usually use square waves so that th body doesn't get used to th treatment. Is there a reason my machine can't run diferent waves? Th freq gen can be set to diferent waves so I don't see why it would matter. Any help would be greatly appreciated! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 14, 2011 Report Share Posted July 14, 2011 Dear , As soon as we place power through a coil, be it a step up voltage coil as used in EMEM Plasma transmitters to other coil designs for producing pulsed magnetic fields (The Doug Coil) then square waves will not be outputted. The coil will change the properties of the square wave. Weather you are operating the EMEM from Mike at TrueRife, or Dr. Loyds EMEM, the high voltage coil will change the input square wave to an output "spike" ... no resemblance to a square wave. Square waves are used for contact electrodes, such as the GB4000 and my PFA-Series of RIFE amplifiers, where we have direct contact of power to the body. Plasma transmitters based on the Bare/Rife design manufacture square waves in the sonic envelope by the use of a 27MHz carrier. This is the closest I have seen to square waves coming from a plasma transmitter. Bare designs does it very well. I have not built nor have experience with the Doug Coil, but have built numerous multi-layed flat Tesla pancake coils and get good performance from them when using sine waves. When I use square waves on them I just get a power spike as the magnetic field output. Having a sine wave running through your coil may offer better biological responses than having a spiked signal with its harmonics for some applications. Sincerely, Ken Uzzellhttp://heal-me.com.au sine vs. square wave. Hi im new to th whole rife machine thing but I did a fair amount ofresearch and finally bought an alex levy doug coil machine. However,on reading th manual, it states that th freq gen should always be seton sine. I was under the impression that lower freq that targetdiseases (I have lyme) usually use square waves so that th bodydoesn't get used to th treatment. Is there a reason my machine can'trun diferent waves? Th freq gen can be set to diferent waves so Idon't see why it would matter. Any help would begreatly appreciated!------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 15, 2011 Report Share Posted July 15, 2011 Ken, thank you for this clearly written reply! I also wondered if sine waves need to be used with the Doug coil to prevent overheating? This would imply and issue with rate of change of the current flow in the waveform... You commented: "Square waves are used for contact electrodes, such as the GB4000 and my PFA-Series of RIFE amplifiers, where we have direct contact of power to the body." There is evidence from several sources, that square waves change shape when current is applied directly to the body through pads. Going to page 57 at this link http://www.artechhouse.com/GetBlob.aspx?strName=O'clock-077_CH03.pdf , which is a sample chapter from the 2007 book Electrotherapeutic Devices: Principles, Design and Applications by Dr. O'Clock, one can see a picture of how the square waveform is changed when it enters the body. The accompanying text says: "Due to the frequency response characteristics of tissue, beyond 40 Hz, the dominant odd harmonics will be attenuated. Rectangular output voltage waveforms will become severely distorted. Figure 3.4 provides an indication of the kind of square wave distortion that can occur, even at very low frequencies of 100 Hz or less, when applied to biological tissue." There is a similar waveform picture in a diagram at p. 315 in the 1989 book "Electrical Properties of Biopolymers and Membranes" by Shiro Takashima - in chapter 10 titled "Electrical Properties of Biological Membranes". The text indicates that the change for the voltage waveform from square to curved (at in first corner as in the picture cited above), is due to resistance present in the conductive fluids surrounding the cells (i.e., extracellular fluids are not perfectly conductive). In the case of e-field and m-field internal body penetration from plasma tubes, I am as yet unsure whether the square wave fields emitted by the Rife-Bare device are changed when entering the body, or not. If there are, the odd harmonics would also be attenuated to some extent, as mentioned by O'Clock above. By the way, I have a copy of O'Clock's book. There is a huge amount of valuable information in that book and clearly written in a way not usually found at other sources. So, when you wrote this: "Having a sine wave running through your coil may offer better biological responses than having a spiked signal with its harmonics for some applications." - I recalled another place in O'Clock's book, at which he talks about the potential therapeutic aspects of a monopolar or slowly varying waveform containing a significant DC component. He points out that the process of healing can involve the motion of fluid over a relatively long distance, which would require a "relatively constant" electric field and current. So your comment about a sine wave (especially low frequency) as opposed to a spiked signal for certain applications, definitely has merit and coincides with other sources as regards healing and regeneration. I have also noticed mention in the electroporation literature, that a longer-lasting waveform (as opposed to spiked or very fast) is one of the major factors in inducing electroporation of a cell. The strength of the e-field is the other major factor. For cancer cells which have relatively electrically fragile membranes as compared to normal cells, the relatively long time per wave could be a factor that tips the effort toward success. It should also make us consider if there are frequency ranges that have waveforms lasting long enough to affect such cells. For instance, the cancer work in Israel by Kirson et al using electric field emissions, found optimal frequency ranges from about 100-300 kHz for those cells. Best wishes, Char sine vs. square wave. Hi im new to th whole rife machine thing but I did a fair amount ofresearch and finally bought an alex levy doug coil machine. However,on reading th manual, it states that th freq gen should always be seton sine. I was under the impression that lower freq that targetdiseases (I have lyme) usually use square waves so that th bodydoesn't get used to th treatment. Is there a reason my machine can'trun diferent waves? Th freq gen can be set to diferent waves so Idon't see why it would matter. Any help would begreatly appreciated!------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 15, 2011 Report Share Posted July 15, 2011 Thanks so much for sharing this information Char :-) Yes, if there is not enough current in the output square wave signal, then the edges of the wave form will become curved as in the diagram on page 57 in the article you shared. The Hulda zapper is a very good example of this - not enough current powering the 555 timer to keep the wave form square when under load. The load I am talking about is not dry hands holding copper cylinders, but saline wet hands that make very good contact. I believe it was the genius of Dr Loyd or Dr Sutherland who came up with a resolution for this some years ago via using a resistor and capacitor in series to "juice up the current" to the rising and falling edge of the square wave. This acts as a biological impedance function and holds the square wave more square when under heavy load. From my looking a spectrum charts, I have seen we need at least 10% of the rise and falling square wave edge to have its original fast rise and fall time to maintain the same range of harmonics. The harmonics will not be as strong "amplitude" as the full square wave, but the spread of harmonics will not be any less. When the square wave does fall over under body load, and 10% of the fast rise and fall time are not preserved, then we experience a reduce range of harmonics, as well as a reduced amplitude. Not too much trouble having a reduce amplitude, but we certainly don't want the range (spread) of harmonics reduced. At 10kHz, we get good harmonics to 1.6MHz and the region around 100kHz to 300kHz has extremely strong harmonics which is the "stop cancer cell dividing" range via the Israel research. I have a few customers that have verified this 100kHz to 300kHz in stopping and reducing brain tumors. This was a big win for the public domain RIFE therapist and user. When I switch the output signal between square wave to sine waves, I feel less "zing" in the body - I had always though this is due to the lack of harmonics in the signal. The sine waves will have small upper and lower sideband, but much less noisy that the square wave. I've been running a program in with the FreX group aimed at switching on our vitamin C gene - oops, just had a look at my web page and saw the link missing on the menu. Here it is here ... http://heal-me.com.au/vitc-project.html Here we were attempting to switch on the human L-gulonolactone oxidase protein. It has been around 6 months now and I'm not sure if it is working. Some folk are experiencing a good response to this program, like they are taking good levels of vitamin C, while other seem not to experience any positive results at all. I am hoping for a strong placebo "belief perception" for assistance ;-) A similar but different program from Dr. Ian McLeod (he had very strong views pro-sine wave support) was used on a person with a failed thyroid, and after 6 months of using sine waves in the (+) polarity (Pulsed DC) 50% of the thyroid function had returned, requiring her to reduce her medication by 50%. She used the 1/2 hour program 3 times a week. About 18 months ago I had a nasty computer crash and lost much of my reference material and papers from Ian McLeod /cry :-( The amplifiers I make all have the bio-impedance circuit in them so the wave form doesn't suffer too much when under heavy body load. However, I use a great little op-amp that will draw upto 40mA to keep the wave form true. Sincerely, Ken Uzzellhttp://heal-me.com.au sine vs. square wave. Hi im new to th whole rife machine thing but I did a fair amount ofresearch and finally bought an alex levy doug coil machine. However,on reading th manual, it states that th freq gen should always be seton sine. I was under the impression that lower freq that targetdiseases (I have lyme) usually use square waves so that th bodydoesn't get used to th treatment. Is there a reason my machine can'trun diferent waves? Th freq gen can be set to diferent waves so Idon't see why it would matter. Any help would begreatly appreciated!------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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