viewtopic.php?t=484&start=45&sid=30296f ... 564296bc89
It seems to me that Mr. Magic, Mr. (Kevin) B. and you might be on the same wavelength.Speaking of fine tuning, think of the strange button that Mr. Magic was speculating about:
When reading all these thoughts I was reminded of one more thing.Mr. Magic wrote:Now the only difference I can see is on the right hand side of the dial. The round object may be the RCA logo (possible) or what was called the "magic eye" which was a tuning indicator. When a station was tuned in, the "magic eye" would indicate a lock on the station. It is interesting to note that RCA used the magic eyes in their tuners and introduced them as early as the 1930s.
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So if this really IS a magic eye, maybe Dr. Brown was "hearing" anything but "looking" at the magic eye instead. This could produce visible indication of regular pulses if so tuned. So maybe the radio wasn't "modified" at all. Maybe Dr. Brown knew how to "read" the pulses.
Maybe Linda Brown could shed more light on this radio. Linda, was there a tuning indicator on this radio on the right hand side of the dial? Or was it just the RCA logo?
Dr. Patrick Flanagan did not just invent the Neurophone (remember the square-waves that Mr. Trickfox posted). He also did research in the following area:
AMhttp://fusionanomaly.net/neurophone.html wrote:HOLOGRAPHIC SOUND
In the Dolphin Project we developed the basis for many potential new technologies. We were able to ascertain the encoding mechanism used by the human brain to decode speech intelligence patterns, and were also able to decode the mechanism used by the brain to locate sound sources in three dimensional space. These discoveries led to the development of a 3-D holographic sound system which could place sounds in any location in space as perceived by the listener. In other words it would be sent in a way where the sound appeared to be coming right out of thin air! The human ear is limited to about 16,000 Hertz (vibrations, pulses or cycles per second) while dolphins generate and hear sounds up to 250,000 Hertz. Our special Neurophone enabled us to hear the full range of dolphin sounds.