My assumption would be you’re not going to “trip balls…man” either. I guess the point is that “out of body events” aren’t real, and certainly not inducible via beat frequencies. They would adjust the intensity slowly and underneath it all was a very, very quiet voice that would ‘lead’ you into an “out of body” event. It would modulate the frequency, between say 793hz and 798hz in the right ear, causing a slow and actually quite pleasant beat frequency that appears to happen in the middle of your head. Then it would play 793hz in the right ear. The tape I had years ago would play a sine wave pitch, and I don’t remember the exact frequency, but lets say 800hz, in the left ear. As you bring the tuning closer to match, the beat frequency slows until the two tones are indistinguishable.
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On a guitar, you’ll get beat frequencies quite easily when you tune using harmonics, say 6th string, 5th fret harmonic to 5th string, 7th fret harmonic (usually A 440hz). Musicians are very familiar with this as it’s something we hear when ever we tune our instrument to another source, or to an adjacent string. When I saw the term Binaural beats it reminded me of a audio cassette I acquired around 1987 that used beat frequencies to attempt to induce “out of body events” Sure enough, after looking throughout the I-doser website, they are referring to the same phenomenon, but instead of inducing “out of body events” it’s going to make you “Trip Balls…man”īeat frequencies are an interesting tone that happens when two tones are slightly out of tune with each other.