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I Invented a Sound That Knocked Out My Tinnitus

Hey David, thought I'd experiment - I've got 2.882 MHz playing on two of my rife generators which utilize a concept called quantum entanglement via DNA to deliver rife frequencies to the body... I'm noticing some activity with my tinnitus just from that alone using a square wave and amplitude wobble, no audio track involved.. Like it's continuously pausing for a split second and my ears feel fuller.. I'll keep it up and see what happens and report back. Cheers m8.
That's great. We could be on the verge of helping millions of people suffering with tinnitus and other conditions.

better sleep increased cognitive.png
 
Hi David,

The document you have uploaded is by a scientist? It doesn't look like a scientific report, but rather a copy and paste from different sources from the Web.

Can you clarify please?
What exactly was found or investigated?
 
Hi David,

The document you have uploaded is by a scientist? It doesn't look like a scientific report, but rather a copy and paste from different sources from the Web.

Can you clarify please?
What exactly was found or investigated?
It is very specific, the sounds of tinnitus mix are forming new sound harmonics in the 2.8 mhz range , this range is know to have healing effects on the brain. He is not English and is not proficient in the English language. Look him up though , he has many technical papers on neuro science

Screenshot_2021-02-05 Dr Dineshen Chuckravanen(1).png
Screenshot_2021-02-05 Dr Dineshen Chuckravanen.png
 
Please give us more than one liners. What is your view on neuroplasticity?
Please don't say "us" as if you were supported by most members here. You're not.

Most of long time members here have left your thread because they know you're on to nothing.
The most simple web search about you proves you're full of conspiracy ideals that are plain surreal.

I've got nothing against you in particular, I just hate when people say things like "use earbuds" to people that suffer from tinnitus. It's dangerous and shows you have no idea what your are talking about.

As to what I know about neuroplasticity, well I work as a hypnologist, so thanks, but I've studied neurosciences and how the brain works. Guess what: the only thing I'm sure of is that we know close to nothing when it comes to how any stimulus can deeply impact tinnitus.

So please, don't try and use big words like "neuroplasticity" while even serious researchers can't even affirm anything about it.

I'm leaving this thread now, I said what I had to say.
 
Please don't say "us" as if you were supported by most members here. You're not.

Most of long time members here have left your thread because they know you're on to nothing.
The most simple web search about you proves you're full of conspiracy ideals that are plain surreal.

I've got nothing against you in particular, I just hate when people say things like "use earbuds" to people that suffer from tinnitus. It's dangerous and shows you have no idea what your are talking about.

As to what I know about neuroplasticity, well I work as a hypnologist, so thanks, but I've studied neurosciences and how the brain works. Guess what: the only thing I'm sure of is that we know close to nothing when it comes to how any stimulus can deeply impact tinnitus.

So please, don't try and use big words like "neuroplasticity" while even serious researchers can't even affirm anything about it.

I'm leaving this thread now, I said what I had to say.
Sorry you feel that way, good luck with that closed mindedness you have formed around you. You are the type of person that scares members on Tinnitus Talk:

from t talk t gone best.png
 
Hey David, thought i'd experiment - I've got 2.882 MHz playing on two of my rife generators which utilize a concept called quantum entanglement via DNA to deliver rife frequencies to the body... I'm noticing some activity with my tinnitus just from that alone using a square wave and amplitude wobble, no audio track involved.. Like it's continuously pausing for a split second and my ears feel fuller.. I'll keep it up and see what happens and report back. Cheers m8.
I think the 2.8 MHz should be modulated like Tinnitus Mix is and not just raw, but let's see if you get results.
 
The document you have uploaded is by a scientist? It doesn't look like a scientific report, but rather a copy and paste from different sources from the Web.

Can you clarify please?
What exactly was found or investigated?
The combination of waves are forming harmonics in the 2.8 MHz range. Here is the results of his test of Tinnitus Mix playing on Koss headphones:

sounds graph dave case sounds.png
 
I'm going to give it a shot once I receive the headphones. I got my tinnitus around 13-15 years ago from doing music with headphones, ear fatigue I would say is the reason... I remember how tired my ears felt afterwards and then I noticed an "iiiiiiiii", I was sure it was something in my apartment, but I quickly noticed it followed me anywhere.

So the volume should be lower than the tinnitus itself? I'm a bit hesitant because ear fatigue was the reason I got tinnitus in the first place (not LOUD music)... so yes obviously I used normal listening volume when I got it, not hardly audible which this will be...
 
I'm curious about this. What does it hurt to try? Low volumes. I have mild loudness hyperacusis, especially in the right ear.

Sensitivity to dishes, keys, coins and slaps etc.

Has anyone other than OP found relief through this, members of this group?

I need this for hyperacusis... How do I get started? I don't have tinnitus, maybe super little... Not enough to matter.
 
I'm going to give it a shot once I receive the headphones. I got my tinnitus around 13-15 years ago from doing music with headphones, ear fatigue I would say is the reason... I remember how tired my ears felt afterwards and then I noticed an "iiiiiiiii", I was sure it was something in my apartment, but I quickly noticed it followed me anywhere.

So the volume should be lower than the tinnitus itself? I'm a bit hesitant because ear fatigue was the reason I got tinnitus in the first place (not LOUD music)... so yes obviously I used normal listening volume when I got it, not hardly audible which this will be...
Yes you should play Tinnitus Mix lower than your tinnitus, this is not a masker. It has helped many band members stop sound induced tinnitus.

musician cured 1.png


musicial cured 2.png
 
I'm curious about this. What does it hurt to try? Low volumes. I have mild loudness hyperacusis, especially in the right ear.

Sensitivity to dishes, keys, coins and slaps etc.

Has anyone other than OP found relief through this, members of this group?

I need this for hyperacusis... How do I get started? I don't have tinnitus, maybe super little... Not enough to matter.
Sure, glad to help, many have got relief from hyperacusis by using Tinnitus Mix.

The directions are different than for tinnitus. For hyperacusis get the Koss KTX-PRO1 headphones and keep them 4 inches away from ears, not on ears. Play on low for 5 minutes first day, 10 minutes second day, etc until you work your way up to several hours or until the hyperacusis is gone.

hyperacusis gone 2.png


hyperacusis gone 3.png
 
I've tried Tinnitus Mix for 2 nights, 1 hour the first night, around 2.5 hour this night... couldn't sleep with the headphones on, uncomfortable since I can only sleep on the side and they press against my ear. I will try again though.

Anyways, it's certainly a bit interesting. The day after the first 1 hour test (+ perhaps 1 hour in the day); the tinnitus got more lively, not louder, just more activity. At one time my tinnitus even sounded like a certain part from the Tinnitus Mix, which was very odd, kind of an up/down scraping, never had that before. Overall the tinnitus was less of a constant tone and more varied and lively. Can't say I particularly liked that, not an improvement.

Today, after the second try of around 2 hours... no change in the morning, the usual constant tone was back. But now a few hours later its lower than it has been for a very long time. How I "test" my tinnitus is to watch something on YouTube - is the tinnitus in the foreground or is it more in the background? It's more in the background currently, more easy to forget that its there.

Everything here could be coincidence, absolutely. I've had peaks and lows since I got it so... The reason I googled and found this site and thread is because I've peaked a lot in the recent 3 months, it's been in the foreground for a long time which has really lowered my mood.

I'm certainly going to continue, hopefully being able to sleep with headphones on.
 
I've tried Tinnitus Mix for 2 nights, 1 hour the first night, around 2.5 hour this night... couldn't sleep with the headphones on, uncomfortable since I can only sleep on the side and they press against my ear. I will try again though.

Anyways, it's certainly a bit interesting. The day after the first 1 hour test (+ perhaps 1 hour in the day); the tinnitus got more lively, not louder, just more activity. At one time my tinnitus even sounded like a certain part from the Tinnitus Mix, which was very odd, kind of an up/down scraping, never had that before. Overall the tinnitus was less of a constant tone and more varied and lively. Can't say I particularly liked that, not an improvement.

Today, after the second try of around 2 hours... no change in the morning, the usual constant tone was back. But now a few hours later its lower than it has been for a very long time. How I "test" my tinnitus is to watch something on YouTube - is the tinnitus in the foreground or is it more in the background? It's more in the background currently, more easy to forget that its there.

Everything here could be coincidence, absolutely. I've had peaks and lows since I got it so... The reason I googled and found this site and thread is because I've peaked a lot in the recent 3 months, it's been in the foreground for a long time which has really lowered my mood.

I'm certainly going to continue, hopefully being able to sleep with headphones on.
The solution is to cut hole in cheap foam pillow, the earpiece fits right in hole and you won't even know you have headphones on, and make sure you use the Koss KTX-PRO1 headphones or it won't work.

Screenshot_2020-12-17 DMI® Inflatable Ring Donut Seat Cushion, 16 Diameter, Blue.png
 
The solution is to cut hole in cheap foam pillow, the earpiece fits right in hole and you won't even know you have headphones on, and make sure you use the Koss KTX-PRO1 headphones or it won't work.
Yeah, it could work if it wasn't for me being super picky with my pillow haha... Sleep is so personal unfortunately, everyone is different I reckon, but I'm perhaps very picky with my sleep position and pillow. I'll keep trying though.
 
Hello Mr Case. I've had noise induced tinnitus (from a very sharp noise on regular headphones) for about 6 months now. Think it's permanent at this stage. It's mostly either moderately noticeable crickets or a low volume piercing sound. Usually worst when I wake up. Think I can still hear pretty well and wonder when that will get worse (as though I've accelerated the process). There have been some rare times when I could hear total silence, but very rare.

I've noticed that running tap water and showers will generally exacerbate my tinnitus, which is usually in the 13000 Hz + range. So I put on noise cancelling headphones when near tap water, and I'm thinking of ear plugs for showers. Really cumbersome. Supplements didn't really do any magic.

This particular mix seems to reduce my tinnitus by masking it:



And this ACRN generator seems to help too:

https://generalfuzz.net/acrn/

I was thinking of getting "1MORE Quad Driver in-Ear Earphones Hi-Res High Fidelity Headphones" and trying your mix through them on repeat mode through the night.

I wish I had better solutions... ongoing talk about stem cell therapies, electrical shocks to a tongue, electromagnetic therapies. Who knows? Maybe a cure of some kind in another century. Don't want to ever wear hearing aids/implants, but I guess that'll be my destiny in a few decades.

Ideas? I'm SOL... I can't understand why headphones don't have noise protection by default and have trouble finding inline filter adapters for them that would prevent loud spikes.
 
I am amazed the generator does help, the higher tones go away for a minute after turning this on for a few minutes. I might try it during night!
 
Hello @R. David Case, I want to ship the Koss KTX-PRO1 from Amazon to Tanzania, but it's way too far and it can take months to deliver.
These also work with Tinnitus Mix. Many people said they can't sleep with headphones so we have been testing many earbuds trying to find ones that will pass ultra high frequencies.

Screenshot_2021-01-22 (1) Anti-Tinnitus Sound Therapy System Facebook.png


Or try to get headphones or speakers that go to 25 kHz of higher.
 
Hello Mr Case. I've had noise induced tinnitus (from a very sharp noise on regular headphones) for about 6 months now. Think it's permanent at this stage. It's mostly either moderately noticeable crickets or a low volume piercing sound. Usually worst when I wake up. Think I can still hear pretty well and wonder when that will get worse (as though I've accelerated the process). There have been some rare times when I could hear total silence, but very rare.

I've noticed that running tap water and showers will generally exacerbate my tinnitus, which is usually in the 13000 Hz + range. So I put on noise cancelling headphones when near tap water, and I'm thinking of ear plugs for showers. Really cumbersome. Supplements didn't really do any magic.
It sounds like you may have reactive tinnitus. If you try Tinnitus Mix with that condition, you should not use headphones but use high quality speakers about 10 ft from your bed and play all night on low for a few weeks. Here are some that go to 40 kHz and will pass the ultrasonics in Tinnitus Mix.

40khz speakers.png
 
Interesting thread, from the few responses I have read, I think you need to do more research on how sampling works. The sampling rate of this file is 44.1 kHz, meaning that the highest frequency it can produce is 22.05 kHz (Nyquist frequency). Please stop spreading bullshit like "Koss KTX-PRO1 high frequency headphones, is producing ULTRA SOUNDS in the 2.8 MHz range."

Samplerate.png
 
Interesting thread, from the few responses I have read, I think you need to do more research on how sampling works. The sampling rate of this file is 44.1 kHz, meaning that the highest frequency it can produce is 22.05 kHz (Nyquist frequency). Please stop spreading bullshit like "Koss KTX-PRO1 high frequency headphones, is producing ULTRA SOUNDS in the 2.8 MHz range."

View attachment 43781
I'm pretty sure someone on this thread posted a frequency analysis of Tinnitus Mix and found that there are no frequencies above 20 kHz.
 
Interesting thread, from the few responses I have read, I think you need to do more research on how sampling works. The sampling rate of this file is 44.1 kHz, meaning that the highest frequency it can produce is 22.05 kHz (Nyquist frequency). Please stop spreading bullshit like "Koss KTX-PRO1 high frequency headphones, is producing ULTRA SOUNDS in the 2.8 MHz range."

View attachment 43781
That is what Dr. Dineshen has found in his testing of Tinnitus Mix. He is a neuroscientist and explains it is occurring from combining frequencies that are causing very high harmonics. Read the report yourself in attachments.

Screenshot_2021-03-09 Convolution.png
 

Attachments

  • Generation of Ultrasound by R. David case sound.pdf
    613.9 KB · Views: 36
I'm pretty sure someone on this thread posted a frequency analysis of Tinnitus Mix and found that there are no frequencies above 20 kHz.
They used a cheap equipment that was only used for music, that did not go high enough in the spectrum. Dr. Dineshen has much higher quality testing equipment at the University of Essex in the U.K. He is not working with toys like everyone on this thread.

Dr Dineshen.png
 

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