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The Secrets of Dr Rife's Resonant Energy Device The Rife's Secrets Device Resonant Energy Some of the microbe-killing radio frequencies of Dr Rife's original ray beam device have now been duplicated with encouraging results. EARLY DEVELOPMENTS IN RADIO-FREQUENCY DEVICES n part one of this article, an overview of the electronic therapeutic device invented by Dr Royal Rife was given, together with an in-depth look at the modern-day counter- part of the original Rife device, the Rife/Bare device. The original Rife device has been a mystery for over 60 years, but now that mystery has essentially been solved. To begin this account, an examination of a small piece of history is necessary to deter- mine what the actual device was. Pre-dating Rife's electronic instrument was another device, developed in the year 1918 by Albert Abrams, MD. Dr Abrams developed a treatment device known as the "Tick-Tock" Oscillator (for its metronome-like action). This was a shock-excited, low-power, short-wave-emitting instrument that operated in the 43-megacycle band. Over 2,000 of these instruments were distributed throughout the world. In 1931 he developed an improved instrument, the Oscilloclast, also operating in the 43-MHz band. This was merely a modernised version of the Tick-Tock Oscillator. The Oscilloclast produced three types of waves: one type was a short wave (as in short- wave radio); the second was an impulse-excited, damped wave of about 90 Hz per minute or 1.5 Hz per second (think of this as a ringing bell); and the third was a kind of alternat- ing magnetic energy. The radio energy emitted by the Oscilloclast was of very low power, being in the milliampere range and incapable of producing a heating effect. The short-wave radio energy in the Abrams device was generated with a 50 per cent duty cycle; that is, the power is on for as long as it is off. This energy was pulsed at a rate of 90 Hz per minute. One could easily think of this as a continuous wave (CW) transmitter, outputting sequentially spaced dashes generated by closing a telegraph key every 1.5 sec- onds. In other words, the pulse was 0.75 seconds long and was then off for 0.75 seconds. The 43-MHz carrier wave, which was pulsed 1.5 times per second, was modulated by the ripples in the half-wave 60-Hz AC power from the wall socket; meaning that a 60-cycle tone—again, a 50 per cent duty cycle—was carried on the radio wave. One could hear this 60-cycle tone in a radio receiver tuned to the 43-MHz frequency of the transmitter. The Oscilloclast also provided a pulsed, alternating magnetic energy through a pair of depolarising electrode plates. The magnetic energy could be measured at about 80 gauss close to the device. The electrodes were placed in close proximity to, if not actually touching, the patient. The depolarising electrodes had a choke coil to prevent the radio waves from entering the circuit. In order to treat a disease, the Oscilloclast operator would vary the output frequency of the short-wave transmitter in 10 steps from about 43.000 MHz to 43.357 MHz. The frequency chosen was of course based on the patient's complaints. To sum all this up, the Oscilloclast was a low-power radio transmitter with a variable radio frequency output. The device produced a gated train of radio frequency pulses that were modulated with a 60-Hz audio frequency wave, and the patient was connected to alternating magnetic energy depolariser electrodes of about 80 gauss with a 1.5-second cycle. To some people reading this explanation of the Oscilloclast, it should be apparent that what Dr Abrams invented was a very early version of a nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) instrument. Modern magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanners use a fixed magnetic field with a variable frequency pulsed radio energy to make their pictures of the interior of the body. Now that we know all that, what does it have to do with the original Rife device? I by James E. Bare, DC ©1997 8005 Marble Avenue, NE Albuquerque, NM 87110, USA Telephone: +1 (505) 268 4272 E-mail: rifetech@rt66.com 8005 Marble Avenue, NE Albuquerque, NM 87110, USA Telephone: +1 (505) 268 4272 E-mail: rifetech@rt66.com APRIL - MAY 1998 NEXUS - 37 by James E. Bare, DC ©1997