Rife Machines – Part 1 The Microscope
What was different about Rife’s microscopes was not just the optics but the technique used to visualize living specimens, without killing them.
More than 75% of the organisms Rife could see with his Universal Microscope are only visible with ultra-violet light. Hence the quartz lenses and prisms: only quartz is transparent to UV light. But ultraviolet light is outside the range of human vision.
Rife overcame this limitation by heterodyning, a technique which became popular in early radio broadcasting. Heterodyning is a fancy name for the way that two different frequencies will transfer their energy to a third “beat” frequency (now you know why I asked you to be patient and try to follow the complex, but necessary explanation).
Rife illuminated the microorganism (usually a virus or bacteria) with two different wavelengths of the same ultraviolet light frequency which resonated with the spectral signature of the microbe. These two wavelengths produced interference where they merged. This interference was, in effect, a third, longer wave which fell into the visible portion of the electromagnetic spectrum.
Rife painstakingly identified the individual spectroscopic signature of each microbe, using a slit spectroscope attachment. Then, he slowly rotated the block of quartz prisms to focus light of a single wavelength upon the microorganism he was examining (you will remember from high school physics that a prism splits white light into its component frequencies). The selected wavelength was chosen because it resonated with the spectroscopic signature frequency of the microbe based on the now-established fact that every molecule oscillates at its own distinct frequency (this was 50 – 60 years before Jacques Benveniste came across the same realization).
The result of using a resonant wavelength is that micro-organisms which are invisible in white light suddenly become visible in a brilliant flash of light when they are exposed to the color frequency that resonates with their own distinct spectroscopic signature, coordinating with the chemical composition of the organism. Rife likened this effect to using light as the equivalent of a chemical stain in conventional microbiology. In fact the particles Rife was able to visualize were smaller than the molecules of typical acid and aniline dye conventional stains!
This new technique gave Rife a unique advantage and enabled him to see things nobody had ever seen before with ordinary microscopes.
GB4000 Frequency Generator
Rife became the first human being to actually see a live virus, and until quite recently, his microscope was the only one which was able to view live viruses. Even more amazingly, he saw that when a Tubercle bacillus was destroyed, it split into many smaller living particles, he called TB viruses (a virus at that time was just considered to be a filterable bacterium).
These altered forms we call pleomorphism and it is bitterly disputed, even today, that such a thing can take place. Of course none of the experts who deny its existence has ever looked through a Rife microscope!
But Rife also saw something else, something startling, something that shouldn’t be there!
(to be continued)
The whole story is told in my book VIRTUAL MEDICINE 2nd edition out now.
And my friend Joshua Parker has done a great job finding the best Rife Frequencies for all sorts of conditions and all you have to do is be a free member of his Rife Club to get his report with all the frequencies.




