Guest guest Posted May 4, 2012 Report Share Posted May 4, 2012 http://gordonresearch.com/articles_PEMF/ read & listen roger ________________________________ To: Rife Sent: Friday, May 4, 2012 12:19 PM Subject: Re: PEMF  Wouldn’t a Doug Coil or all Rife type devices also be considered a PEMF? They produce oscillating frequencies so is that the same as pulsing frequencies?  Bonita Poulin Canadian Coordinator GLOBAL RECOGNITION CAMPAIGN Multiple Chemical Sensitivity and other Chemically Induced Illnesses, Diseases & Injury affecting civilians and military personnel http://www.mcs-global.org www.mcsglobalawareness.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 4, 2012 Report Share Posted May 4, 2012 http://gordonresearch.com/articles_PEMF/ read & listen roger ________________________________ To: Rife Sent: Friday, May 4, 2012 12:19 PM Subject: Re: PEMF  Wouldn’t a Doug Coil or all Rife type devices also be considered a PEMF? They produce oscillating frequencies so is that the same as pulsing frequencies?  Bonita Poulin Canadian Coordinator GLOBAL RECOGNITION CAMPAIGN Multiple Chemical Sensitivity and other Chemically Induced Illnesses, Diseases & Injury affecting civilians and military personnel http://www.mcs-global.org www.mcsglobalawareness.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 5, 2012 Report Share Posted May 5, 2012 Thanks . I wish I could listen, but reading is my only option, since I get charged extra by my ISP for using too much bandwidth, and I can’t afford it. Only in Canada are we charged like that and it sucks! I couldn’t find an answer on the linked pages I looked at in the Gordonresearch website. From what I have read on, http://www.pemft.com/pemf-signal-intensity a Doug Coil might be considered a PEMP, if the right frequency was used. It states 3 parameters; Intensity strong enough to pass through the body, Frequency between 1 to 50 Hz , and one or several of the wave forms. (sine, square, triangle, sawtooth) I have been able to measure the frequency at the far end of my body while coiling, which satisfies the intensity question. My machine can do frequencies as low as 5Hz (my friend figured out how to do low frequencies on a DC) or I can use harmonics to achieve them and It can do various wave forms. For those of you interested, here is how to do: Low Doug Frequencies I did some scientific investigation of operating frequencies below 100 Hz. Here are my operating guidelines for not so faint of heart: 0 Hz to 5 Hz - do not operate the coil in this range 5 Hz to 19.9 Hz - operate the coil with -20 dB turn off, amplitude knob is very very sensitive, do not exceed 1.3V (13 Amps) because the voltage drifts up, monitor the red LEDs on the amp for clipping. 20 Hz to 100 Hz - operate the coil with -20 dB turn on (normal operation), amplitude knob is sensitive, do not exceed 1.3V (13 Amps) because the voltage drifts up Need a second fan mounted on front of amp to exhaust heat from amp. I used the harmonics 6.4 Hz and 51.2 Hz for the therapeutic freq 0.8 Hz successfully on the coil for 30 minutes total. The amp produces a lot of heat but the coil was barely luke warm. Be very careful operating the coil machine below 240 Hz with switch A <ON> and the remaining switches <OFF>. Its business as usual when operating the coil above 20 Hz with the -20 dB turned <ON>. <http://gordonresearch.com/articles_PEMF/ read & listenroger> Bonita PoulinCanadian CoordinatorGLOBAL RECOGNITION CAMPAIGNMultiple Chemical Sensitivityand other Chemically Induced Illnesses, Diseases & Injuryaffecting civilians and military personnelwww.mcs-global.org www.mcsglobalawareness.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 5, 2012 Report Share Posted May 5, 2012 Thanks . I wish I could listen, but reading is my only option, since I get charged extra by my ISP for using too much bandwidth, and I can’t afford it. Only in Canada are we charged like that and it sucks! I couldn’t find an answer on the linked pages I looked at in the Gordonresearch website. From what I have read on, http://www.pemft.com/pemf-signal-intensity a Doug Coil might be considered a PEMP, if the right frequency was used. It states 3 parameters; Intensity strong enough to pass through the body, Frequency between 1 to 50 Hz , and one or several of the wave forms. (sine, square, triangle, sawtooth) I have been able to measure the frequency at the far end of my body while coiling, which satisfies the intensity question. My machine can do frequencies as low as 5Hz (my friend figured out how to do low frequencies on a DC) or I can use harmonics to achieve them and It can do various wave forms. For those of you interested, here is how to do: Low Doug Frequencies I did some scientific investigation of operating frequencies below 100 Hz. Here are my operating guidelines for not so faint of heart: 0 Hz to 5 Hz - do not operate the coil in this range 5 Hz to 19.9 Hz - operate the coil with -20 dB turn off, amplitude knob is very very sensitive, do not exceed 1.3V (13 Amps) because the voltage drifts up, monitor the red LEDs on the amp for clipping. 20 Hz to 100 Hz - operate the coil with -20 dB turn on (normal operation), amplitude knob is sensitive, do not exceed 1.3V (13 Amps) because the voltage drifts up Need a second fan mounted on front of amp to exhaust heat from amp. I used the harmonics 6.4 Hz and 51.2 Hz for the therapeutic freq 0.8 Hz successfully on the coil for 30 minutes total. The amp produces a lot of heat but the coil was barely luke warm. Be very careful operating the coil machine below 240 Hz with switch A <ON> and the remaining switches <OFF>. Its business as usual when operating the coil above 20 Hz with the -20 dB turned <ON>. <http://gordonresearch.com/articles_PEMF/ read & listenroger> Bonita PoulinCanadian CoordinatorGLOBAL RECOGNITION CAMPAIGNMultiple Chemical Sensitivityand other Chemically Induced Illnesses, Diseases & Injuryaffecting civilians and military personnelwww.mcs-global.org www.mcsglobalawareness.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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