Technical Reports and Patents

These documents from various sources include reports on, and circuit drawings of plasma ray devices created during the Rife era. Also listed are Rife’s patent documents, and related patent awards to other inventors.

Technical reports & circuit drawings

Oscilloclast Research - This book chapter is titled “Report on the Electrical Properties of an Oscilloclast”, penned by Dr. E.T. Jones and published in April 1925. It gives details about the electronic circuitry of that device. The book’s title is “Abrams’ Methods of Diagnosis and Treatment” by Sir James Barr.

AZ-58 Electronic test - This is an electronic performance test report for the AZ-58 plasma ray device, from June 1958.

AZ-58 Components, Assembly, Drawings - This document contains a listing of components from the AZ-58 plasma ray device, as well as assembly instructions and circuit drawings. Dated August 1958.

AZ-58 Revisited - A thorough technical overview written by electrical engineer Roger Blain about the 1950s-60s AZ-58 plasma ray devices. It includes an excellent history of predecessor devices, as well as analysis of potentially incomplete circuit design and drawings. Dated July 2018.

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Rife patent documents

Rife microscope lamp - U.S. patent #1,727,618 was awarded to Rife in 1929 for his microscope lamp illuminator.

Rife and Thompson 1956 patent application - This document was submitted to the U.S. Patent Office by Royal Rife and Verne Thompson in August 1956, and was a continuation of application #512,326 previously submitted on May 31, 1955. It describes devices and various methods for purifying seawater or other fluids/substances, and affecting the viability of pathogens. No patent was awarded on this application.

Other patent documents

Oscilloclast component - This patent award is for the “tic-toc” portion associated with the Abrams’ oscilloclast, but is not the complete oscilloclast device. U.S. #1,445,951 awarded to Samuel O. Hoffman in 1923.

Microscope - U.S. patent #3,129,353 awarded in 1964 to Elmer Nemes for a complex microscope, titled “Multiple Radiation Source Microscope”. Nemes was loosely affiliated with John Crane in the 1960s.

Microscope - U.S. patent #8,638,495 awarded in 2014 to Stanley Truman and Eric Rowley.