Re: Rife

Bill McMurtry ( weber@powerup.com.au )
Tue, 03 Feb 1998 21:11:35 +1000

snip

>Hello Bill:
>I built a device very much like James E. Bare a couple of years ago. I
>would fire into it the frequencies from the progrm Blaster5 (to be found
>somewhere in the Keelynet Files). It was hard to appreciate its effects
>since I have not been sick and am not equipped to observe living blood
>sample (such as with a dark field microscope). My partner used to
>suffers from immune deficiencies resulting in severe chemical/food
>sensitivities and of an early stage breast cancer; she used to expose
>herself to the device. She is now in remittance but still suffers from
>chemical sensitivities. However the Rife thing was only one of many
>therapies she followed so I could not say it was due to the device. A
>couple interesting notes though:
>- while I was tuning the SWR (Standing Wave Ratio) of the antenna with
>the help of a friend we unplugged the thing and the plasma tube kept
>self firing for about 10 second!
>- I used to expose to the plasma tube some colloidal silver to which had
>been added some Flanagan microclusters
>(http://www.flantech.com/mcs.htm)and I did not get a cold for the time I
>was drinking the stuff (2 years)though I had many many chances to get
>infected.
>
>Other observation: I think it made a difference weather the plasma tube
>was alligned to magnetic north or not (North better) why?
>I am sure the noble gas mix that Rife used was critically important
>(J.E. Bare says not). I have no idea what he used. Someone?
>Have a look at http://hilarion.com/igd.html for health effect of Noble
>gases.
>
>Also: I just found an interesting proposal for a free energy vortex
>pump (poorly subsantiated perahps) at
>http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Lobby/1828/whirlpool.html
>
>Mathias
>

Hello Mathias,
Fascinating report.
It is interesting to read, in the Nexus article I refer to, that Bare is
not all that impressed with past attempts with Rife tube devices (?). From
what I can gather, the output tube is a relatively complex piece of
equipement in itself. Bare mentions that the "colour" of the tube has
different physiological effects. He states that the light frequency
(colour) is important to some extent ie: The colour mauve being most
destructive to cancer cells.
This is interesting. I would speculate that Rife put considerable work into
understanding just the output tube gas mixtures and pressures.
I myself have had some experience with noble gas mixture balances in the
form of "plasma spheres". You know, those glass balls displays with
lightning inside that react to you touching the outside of the glass.
Around 1988 I was commissioned, by an entertainment company, to reproduce
the gas mixture inside commercially available plasma spheres. This company
had spent quite some money employing a highly qualified lab to solve their
problem for them - to no avail. The gases were defined, the ratios were
nailed, the pressure was known. But when all these parameters were
replicated inside a glass sealed ball, and the power supply connected, the
output display had no form, colour, beauty, etc.
I found that to successfully create a beautiful plasma sphere display
required a PROCESS, which resulted in the required parameters. A bit like
baking a cake really.
Rife would have approached his tube gasing more experimentally and with all
sorts of "theories" under his hat. Argon is cheap and can produce an
astounding variety of output characteristics in itself, just by playing
with the pressure alone (I've been able to produce 500mm long
lightning-like discharges in an argon only gassed sphere at atmospheric
pressure with less than 5000v A.C.).
Of course manipulating variables to create a visually pleasing plasma
display is childs play compared with what Rife was doing. Mainly because of
the difficulty in ascertaining whether a changed variable is taking you
closer or further away from your goal. It's easy if you can SEE the effects
of changes you make in a system. Rife must have been one patient man.

What is a "dark field" microscope and how does it work?

Bill.