Guest guest Posted August 4, 2004 Report Share Posted August 4, 2004 Hi , I hope your on the positive upward road from your operation. This is great news, but would it get to 12MHz to cover the top of the Rife Range? I've only ever used square or sine waves. I heard there is a RS232 to USB hardware convertor so I could get Frex to talk to it, that would be nice. It appears that being able to set a wobble effect on the frequency is proving itself. Short dwell times of 0.1 second would be good so computer software could drive the wobble, thus giving extra options to people on how the wobble is set-up and how far it wobbles and how quickly it wobbles and what pattern it wobbles to. I don't know enough to comment on duty, my machine is set to 50% and I can't change it. From the computer's com's/usb port, we could just send a frequency instruction to it. All the FG has to do it switch the old frequency off and switch the new frequency on. A simple instruction could exist to switch between sine and square wave. This would make it a very open ended and easy to program for FG. Wouldn't it be nice to scan up at 11 and 12 meg like the Fscan does. Ken Uzzell ----- Original Message ----- > Hi Rife group, > I have been at home recovering from a hernia operation and spending time running over part availability in Australia. One particular chip that would extent the frequency range of me device way beyond the 10Mhz range in sine and square wave production has to come from China that's right China! I was considering dropping it from my device until the last few posts. It can only to 50% duty cycle at these frequencies, do you think this would be ok? I should be able to do varible duty cycle up to 150khz for square wave output, as well as sawtooth waveform. Do I really need sawtooth waveforms?? Does anyone us sawtooth waveforms??? > Regards > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 4, 2004 Report Share Posted August 4, 2004 Ken, The chip I have chosen has 2 control registers so that I can change the frequency for the next run and execute it when required. It handles all the zero crossing stuff and does the lookups on chip. As I said the limitation is the 50% duty cycle but can go from 0.05 Hz to 15Mhz but as you can imagine it would take a long time to sweep. Maybe I could introduce a logarithmic sweep function as well! I will still need to have the variable duty cycle square wave output to drive EMEM machines as they require a large charge time for the coil. Regards Re: High frequency- low frequency thanks for the lead > Hi , > > I hope your on the positive upward road from your operation. > > This is great news, but would it get to 12MHz to cover the top of the Rife > Range? > > I've only ever used square or sine waves. > > I heard there is a RS232 to USB hardware convertor so I could get Frex to > talk to it, that would be nice. > > It appears that being able to set a wobble effect on the frequency is > proving itself. Short dwell times of 0.1 second would be good so computer > software could drive the wobble, thus giving extra options to people on how > the wobble is set-up and how far it wobbles and how quickly it wobbles and > what pattern it wobbles to. > > I don't know enough to comment on duty, my machine is set to 50% and I can't > change it. > > From the computer's com's/usb port, we could just send a frequency > instruction to it. All the FG has to do it switch the old frequency off and > switch the new frequency on. A simple instruction could exist to switch > between sine and square wave. This would make it a very open ended and easy > to program for FG. Wouldn't it be nice to scan up at 11 and 12 meg like the > Fscan does. > > Ken Uzzell --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.733 / Virus Database: 487 - Release Date: 8/2/04 -- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.733 / Virus Database: 487 - Release Date: 8/2/04 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 4, 2004 Report Share Posted August 4, 2004 Hi and Ken Sorry to jump into your dialogue...but, it would be nice if software development in the Rife area was able to standardize in some way, so that treatment 'scripts' were portable between different machine environments. The F100 scripting 'language' appears to be a great start. One script, for example, might be discovered to be useful against the latest flu virus (Sutherland's Scripts!) and can therefore be easily distributed to an eager community. Developing suitable software layers to accomodate an interface to this kind of portable code could be nasty or it might be a little more elegant. Modern PC or handheld hardware is significantly more capable than it was a few years ago, and aside from slow RS232 interfaces still being used in designs (which can become a bottleneck - check the F100 comparison between PC and PalmPilot versions), there isn't a great need for tight, slim code - we're not producing full motion encrypted and compressed video, for example. So software developers can benefit from the existing layers built into modern computer operating systems and toolsets as well as be better prepared for making changes in functionality quickly, without having to do a major rewrite of a large monolithic chunk of code. Of course the code dependencies between the application and its environment may become stumbling blocks too. I guess from an architectural perspective I'd like to think that an application (like FREX) might make use of a standard scripting language (which would be enhanced using XML tags) and could communicate to a device through a device driver. When releases his hardware device he only needs to have device drivers written (for Windows, Linux, etc..) and can immediately take advantage of applications already written and supported by others. We can all avoid the pitfalls of having to produce fully supportable proprietary systems off our own backs. We can all share in the success of systems whose feature sets can be expanded relatively quickly, especially when most of us only have limited resources at our disposal. Sorry if I'm ranting a bit, but it would be better for us all if we collaborated even more than we're doing here. Thanks especially to you both for sharing your work with us all here in the Rife community but we've got a long way to go yet. FREX is a great start Ken and your preliminary specs for your frequency device looks very promising - do you have a web site that you're updating on your progress? Regards Stenhouse Vancouver, B.C., Canada > Hi , > > I hope your on the positive upward road from your operation. > > This is great news, but would it get to 12MHz to cover the top of the Rife > Range? > > I've only ever used square or sine waves. > > I heard there is a RS232 to USB hardware convertor so I could get Frex to > talk to it, that would be nice. > > It appears that being able to set a wobble effect on the frequency is > proving itself. Short dwell times of 0.1 second would be good so computer > software could drive the wobble, thus giving extra options to people on how > the wobble is set-up and how far it wobbles and how quickly it wobbles and > what pattern it wobbles to. > > I don't know enough to comment on duty, my machine is set to 50% and I can't > change it. > > From the computer's com's/usb port, we could just send a frequency > instruction to it. All the FG has to do it switch the old frequency off and > switch the new frequency on. A simple instruction could exist to switch > between sine and square wave. This would make it a very open ended and easy > to program for FG. Wouldn't it be nice to scan up at 11 and 12 meg like the > Fscan does. > > Ken Uzzell > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: " " <.Barrie.@b...> > > > > Hi Rife group, > > I have been at home recovering from a hernia operation > and spending time running over part availability in Australia. One > particular chip that would extent the frequency range of me device way > beyond the 10Mhz range in sine and square wave production has to come from > China that's right China! I was considering dropping it from my device > until the last few posts. It can only to 50% duty cycle at these > frequencies, do you think this would be ok? I should be able to do varible > duty cycle up to 150khz for square wave output, as well as sawtooth > waveform. Do I really need sawtooth waveforms?? Does anyone us sawtooth > waveforms??? > > Regards > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2004 Report Share Posted August 6, 2004 Hi (and Ken) Just a couple of points I thought I'd try to clear up. RS232 covers a hardware specification as well as a method (protocol) for serial communications. USB is a more modern approach to serial communications and is faster, utilising a different hardware specification. Typically one would have a converter to adapt RS232 to USB. Using USB gives one some better options in interface speed between computer and I/O device and avoiding potential bottlenecks that might emerge if one was to build in a sensing channel or two into future devices similar to FSCAN. One of the better multipurpose research tools I've used is Tiepie Engineering's Handyscope HS3-100, which has multimeter, oscilloscope (100 Mhz), spectrum analyzer and transient recorder (good for harmonics) functions as well as an Arbitrary Waveform Generator, which in a special model can deliver up to a 10 MHz waveform (user-defined or captured wave form is possible) with 100 ppm accuracy - of course it would be nice if the accuracy was more in line with your new device. It comes with a USB 2.0 interface and with a Windows DLL for application developers to interface with, if they wish. More info on http://www.tiepie.nl/pages/uk/hscope3.html You definitely need faster physical interface speeds if you wish to incorporate any rapid feedback type loops into your system, which is what USB 2.0 offers. I'm hoping that this might be in your future plans! Anyway, I'm not sure if I can provide a suitable tutorial on XML technologies in a concise enough manner but I think it makes interfacing application data and code a whole lot easier, especially when debugging or when requirements change. Our PC applications like FREX presently consider the 'Frequencies' to be the most important items worth 'sharing', but I feel in time, the entire protocol will become important - i.e. that the method is as important as the ingredients are to the finished product (excuse the cooking analogy)! XML allows data to be presented in a richer manner, complete with structures that might indicate method. XSLT templates transform this to something that a particular machine will be able to interpret. The entire vocabulary and master structure is held in a schema that the Rife community can maintain. This enables Rife XML messages to be imported, exported, processed in real-time to a consistent and flexible standard. Traditional interfaces are inflexible and demand updating on both sides of the interface, when either parties interfacing specification or needs change. It's kept me in business for too long! A reasonable and meaningful example of an XML message, delivered from a database to another application might be: <RifeMessage MessageType= " script " > <ID>AS001</ID> <Name>Ankylosing Spondilitis #1</Name> <Description>CAFL list for AS treatment</Description> <Comment></Comment> <DefaultProcessType>Fixed</DefaultProcessType> <DefaultTimeUnits>seconds</DefaultTimeUnits> <DefaultFrequencyUnits>Hz</DefaultFrequencyUnits> <DefaultIntensityUnits>mV</DefaultIntensityUnits> <MinTreatmentTime>1800</MinTreatmentTime> <MaxTreatmentTime>3600</MaxTreatmentTime> <ProcessList> <Process ProcessType= " Loop " Iterations=10 Delay=5> <Waveform>Square</Waveform> <Intensity>9000</Intensity> <Frequency>326</Frequency> <Duration>3</Duration> </Process> <Process ProcessType= " Conditional " RangeMin=120 RangeMax=180> <Waveform>Square</Waveform> <Intensity>3000</Intensity> <Frequency>3000</Frequency> <Duration>180</Duration> </Process> </ProcessList> </RifeMessage> This is probably a very poor example and I hope the text formatting isn't destroyed in posting, but I'm hoping it will be indicative of the possibilities of being able to share information between applications in a very meaningful way. Note that an XSLT template would 'convert' such a message as this for output to a device. Once our master schema is defined we can share such information very efficiently and effectively to the user community and be more assured of the correct interpretation/usage. Anyway, sorry I put a spanner in the works and this has taken longer than I'd originally anticipated, but I'm hoping it's of some value. Regards to you both and thanks for the correspondence! :-) > > > Hi , > > > > > > I hope your on the positive upward road from your operation. > > > > > > This is great news, but would it get to 12MHz to cover the top of > > the Rife > > > Range? > > > > > > I've only ever used square or sine waves. > > > > > > I heard there is a RS232 to USB hardware convertor so I could get > > Frex to > > > talk to it, that would be nice. > > > > > > It appears that being able to set a wobble effect on the frequency > > is > > > proving itself. Short dwell times of 0.1 second would be good so > > computer > > > software could drive the wobble, thus giving extra options to > > people on how > > > the wobble is set-up and how far it wobbles and how quickly it > > wobbles and > > > what pattern it wobbles to. > > > > > > I don't know enough to comment on duty, my machine is set to 50% > > and I can't > > > change it. > > > > > > From the computer's com's/usb port, we could just send a frequency > > > instruction to it. All the FG has to do it switch the old frequency > > off and > > > switch the new frequency on. A simple instruction could exist to > > switch > > > between sine and square wave. This would make it a very open ended > > and easy > > > to program for FG. Wouldn't it be nice to scan up at 11 and 12 meg > > like the > > > Fscan does. > > > > > > Ken Uzzell > > > > --- > Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. > Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). > Version: 6.0.734 / Virus Database: 488 - Release Date: 8/4/04 > > > > -- > Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. > Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). > Version: 6.0.734 / Virus Database: 488 - Release Date: 8/4/04 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2004 Report Share Posted August 7, 2004 Hi Ken and thanks for the response! There are a number of advantages to using XML and a couple of disadvantages. The biggest disadvantage is that the message is transmitted in text format which adds bulk to the message with all the XML tag and attributes defined in a relatively long-winded way. Another disadvantage (to some) is that the message is relatively easy to interpret, although encryption methods are available for use. An XML frequency pill, can be emailed, posted, passed as messages between different applications in real-time environments, including automatic updates to custom databases that might mimic the structure of the message. Although the pill is considered 'data' we can plan to store our frequency data with more related information. I haven't done an exhaustive analysis yet on what the data model for Rife testing might look like, but it could be easily expanded to include treatment outcome results. I'd probably think you'd need to include the following objects ('classes' to come modelers!): - Treatment Device; - Diagnostic Device; - Diagnostic Scripts; - Treatment Scripts; - Diagnostic Dictionary; - Treatment Dictionary; - Health Problems; - Health Symptoms; - Persons (Patients/Doctors/etc..); - Treatment Outcomes; I know currently you have just one table in Frex11, but I'm sure you'd like to build in capability at some time. We can take this sort of chat off-line if you'd like to. In any case, there is a need for this kind of analysis and data to be kept and made available for all Rife researchers to consolidate our work and give it some statistical credibility at the very least. Hope this helps, Regards > Hi , > > I think I am getting closer to understanding what your saying. > > We have a format for sending frequency pills. Would these files be attached > to e-mail or in a message or would applications directly connect to their > own network and share files directly ? > > There is no problem getting Visual Basic to to open and read these files and > present the data to people using frex for inclussion in their database. > > Frex could also easily create these files for distriptuion to a network or > central broadcast system. I haven't done much internet or networking program > in VB. Getting Frex to retrieve the CAFL web page, save it, read it and > process it was a great feat for me. > > It's just transporting the scripts around the place that I am totally in the > dark with. The rest looks good. > > My biggest winge is time, I need to get Frex12 finished so I can put in more > time to the scanning functions. Circuits are moving quickly and I need to > keep the software upto the hardware. > > Regards > Ken Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.