How can Acoustic Revive RR-888 produce 7.83hz?


This is not meant to be a bashing post. I want to try and understand this device as I find it very interesting. I have no scientific background. I presume that 7.83hz is transmitted as a wave. I have previously gone to a professional sound room that was designed by world famous studio designer Tom Hidley to cleanly produce 20hz. Firstly the room needed to be of a certain dimension (which was bigger than my listening room). Secondly the speakers were large Kinoshita studio monitors with dimensions of 1050/1300/800cm with each monitor having 2 large bass drivers of some 16-18 inches in diameter. They were driven by Kinoshita-JMF HQS4200UPM mono power amps which each delivered 450w into 8ohms.

Presumably you would need a very large room to produce a 7.83hz wave? To quote from the Acoustic Revive website, "...we developed and manufactured a device to generate the 7.83Hz electric wave artificially, the Ultra-low Frequency generator RR-888". Am I missing something fundamental? How can such a small device generate such a wave in my 22x12x10 foot listening room?

Thanks
128x128bluewolf
Its a fair question. How about asking someone who should know like the company that makes it and let us know.
An excellent question! The thing does make quite a difference and there is a growing awareness in the audiophile community that this is not just another
'tweak-of-the-week'.
I have no idea how it works but I've brougth one over to 5 friends homes and every one heard an improvement and bought one, some rooms were more subtle that others and some were jaw dropping good!

(Dealer disclaimer)

PS: If you live in the Boston area I'd be more than happy to bring one by for a listen (as soon as I recover from some back surgery).
One way to do it is to produce two waves of higher frequency that are separated in frequency by the desired 7.83 Hz. The difference frequency will magically appear in the room. The real question is how a 7.83 Hz electromagnetic wave can fit in the room, you know, since it's 25,000 miles long?