Introduction to Frequencies and Anecdotes Read this before using the frequency lists.
CAFL The Consolidated Annotated Frequency List. The most popular file on this website. It is the Master List and probably the most-used reference for frequency researchers. If you have any well-tested frequency sets you would like to contribute to this ongoing project, please email me. It is updated often.
Non-Consolidated Frequency List This contains separate lists of frequencies from many sources. It also contains 2 frequency lists that the CAFL does not incorporate - frequencies for muscles in the body and for chemical elements. It is not updated and was compiled circa 1998.
Frequency Cross Reference - Lists frequencies with the conditions they are used for. This list may not reflect all of the frequencies in the CAFL and is not kept updated. See Stone Circle Alternatives for the latest list in a well-formatted version. Useful to see if there are matches when hits occur during scanning or when the purpose of a frequency being used is forgotten.
Brainwave Frequency Listing - This is a list kept by Michael Triggs on the Papercut Suicide website and contains an extensive listing of brainwave frequencies and others like colors, scale notes, plus a few rife frequencies. Colorful and well annotated. Read the introduction. After viewing the website, one may decide that running brainwave frequencies is not a good idea <g>.
Anecdotes These are files primarily of posts to the Rife listservers where people report results of using sets on Rife-Bare and other devices. If you have any anecdotes you'd like to contribute, good or bad, please email me.
Reports are detailed Anecdotes. If you have any Reports you'd like to contribute, please email me.
The Frex Frequency Database is an easy to use Windows program which makes finding sets of frequencies in the CAFL easy. It is not updated as often as the CAFL.