Guest guest Posted July 1, 2004 Report Share Posted July 1, 2004 Being a very new member myself I can see the advantages in using this method, I wish that other groups would do this. It looks as though I may have found a place in Townsvile willing to make me a couple of Rife tubes. He only has 75/25 mix Argon/Neon but it is a start. I am getting 2 tubes made 15mm OD 300mm lenght 11-13 mbar pressure. One interesting thing that he told me was that the electrodes absorb some of the gas over time and the pressure drops over time. He also mentioned that a dealer that he deals with uses RF to drive the tubes and has a driving unit which allows gating via a 12Volt signal. I am going to chase this up farther. He promised me a data sheet on the driver. He said that the driver was about $150 - $160 but if you can use this as the major drive component of you Rife system it may make it easier and faster to build the RF version machine than the current approach of adapting CB radios. Regards Re: Rife Forum login > Hi Shirley, > the approval process is very important to maintain the high quality > of members on the forum (and this Rife Yahoogroup). That way, we can > keep the quality of members and messages high and keep out the > spammers, etc. that seem to be getting everywhere these days. > > Discussing matters of personal health needs a degree of sensitivity > and the approval process goes a long way towards making sure only the > right people are on the list. On the Rife Forum, we actually go a > step further with the " Trusted Member " designation for those members > of high standing in the Rife community. The criteria for such a > status has been set higher so that members can have a better idea of > who has earned themselves a good reputation in the Rife community. > > I have received countless Emails from members praising this system > and the way this is done. The down side for me personally is that it > does cost a lot of my time to individually assess each member. > > Regards > > > Moderator > --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.713 / Virus Database: 469 - Release Date: 6/30/04 -- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.713 / Virus Database: 469 - Release Date: 6/30/04 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 1, 2004 Report Share Posted July 1, 2004 , The CB radio produces a very different wave from that of a gated carrier system. A CB radio takes the carrier and combines it with an amplified audio signal to produce a high amplitude overmodulated output. Gated CW merely chops the carrier into segments based upon the applied audio frequency. Gated CW at best has about 1/3 of the transmitter/amplifers power go into a form capable of demodulation. Meaning nearly 2/3 of the power is carrier wave and wasted. An overmodulated CB will only have around 20% of it's total power go to the carrier. The other 80% or more will be available for demodulation. In other words on a watt per watt basis an overmodulated system produces an effective (demodulated ) wave two to three times more powerful as a CW system. Highly overmodulated systems also produce a lot more harmonics than a comparable CW system. To put this in perspective. A typical 100 watt CB based machine will have a demodulated signal equal to that of a 200 - 250 watt gated CW machine. There are many more aspects to the differences of the two systems, but these are the basics. Jim Bare A He promised me a data >sheet on the driver. He said that the driver was about $150 - $160 but if >you can use this as the major drive component of you Rife system it may make >it easier and faster to build the RF version machine than the current >approach of adapting CB radios. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 2, 2004 Report Share Posted July 2, 2004 Hi Jim, I realise the sidebands carry all the energy and the carrier wave is wasted, but I was looking at making a cheap device. Has anyone tried punching the CW and sidebands into a tube? Would the CW damp the sidebands? I also saw some low power 27Mhz transmitters at http://www.oatleyelectronics.com the only wanted $4 each maybe you couuld run the output through a linear. These devices I would guess are not audio devices because they are too cheap. Thanks for the pointers Jim Regards Re: Re: Rife Forum login > , > > The CB radio produces a very different wave from that of a gated carrier > system. A CB radio takes the carrier and combines it with an amplified > audio signal to produce a high amplitude overmodulated output. Gated CW > merely chops the carrier into segments based upon the applied audio > frequency. Gated CW at best has about 1/3 of the transmitter/amplifers > power go into a form capable of demodulation. Meaning nearly 2/3 of the > power is carrier wave and wasted. > > An overmodulated CB will only have around 20% of it's total power go to the > carrier. The other 80% or more will be available for demodulation. In other > words on a watt per watt basis an overmodulated system produces an > effective (demodulated ) wave two to three times more powerful as a CW > system. Highly overmodulated systems also produce a lot more harmonics than > a comparable CW system. > > To put this in perspective. A typical 100 watt CB based machine will have a > demodulated signal equal to that of a 200 - 250 watt gated CW machine. > > There are many more aspects to the differences of the two systems, but > these are the basics. > > Jim Bare --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.713 / Virus Database: 469 - Release Date: 6/30/04 -- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.713 / Virus Database: 469 - Release Date: 6/30/04 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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