The Frontier Atlas
VECTOR: PHASE-CONJUGATE PLASMAShips from California, USDan Winter / Implosion Group — sold via GeometricModels.org (Tufan Guven, engineer Nick Frigge)

PhiRay

A $6,900 plasma-and-magnetic-field device marketed as the direct replacement for the maker's earlier Theraphi system — claimed to be 2–4x more powerful at roughly a quarter of the cost.

3 SOURCES CITED
CLAIMED — WHAT THE MAKER STATES
  • The maker states PhiRay applies the same 'phase conjugate' plasma principle as Theraphi but adds a moveable magnetic coil aligned with the plasma field, and removes Theraphi's high-voltage (half-million-volt) drive, which the maker now says was unnecessary and actually worked against the healing effect.
  • The seller's own comparison table claims PhiRay is 2–4x more powerful than Theraphi at about 1/4 the price, based on 'experienced user' reports rather than instrumented testing.
  • Named testimonials describe specific outcomes: one user (Dan MacDonald) reports vision returning to 20/20 and arthritis pain dropping from 6/10 to 1/10 after 3 sessions; another (Dominique, S. France) reports improved energy and reduced fatigue alongside an unrelated sleep-apnea treatment already in progress.
  • The seller states PhiRay is a 'Linux programmable computer core' system including two plasma spheres, a moveable magnetic coil, and full instructions/support, with a 1-year warranty.
CITED SOURCES — NAMED, NOT ADJUDICATED
Elizabeth Rauscher's FDA study on magnetic harmonics for pain

Cited by the seller as correlating with PhiRay's frequency choices. Same citation used for the earlier Theraphi product — the Atlas has not yet independently located this study.

Dan Winter's 'Planckphire' equation

The maker's own proprietary framework for 'phase conjugate implosive negentropic' frequency selection — not an independently peer-reviewed theory, presented here as the basis for PhiRay's design.

Seller's own comparison table (EESystem, Theraphi, Piezophire, Plasmaphire)

The seller directly claims 'Sandra Rose lost court case showing even the original idea was stolen' regarding EESystem (a separate device in the Atlas's research queue). This is a specific, checkable legal claim made by a competitor — not yet independently verified.

EVERY SOURCE IS NAMED SO YOU CAN VERIFY IT YOURSELF. NAMING A SOURCE IS NOT ENDORSING IT.

OPEN QUESTIONS — NOT YET RESOLVED
  • Has any party outside the maker's own testimonials and comparison table independently measured PhiRay's claimed 2–4x power increase over Theraphi?
  • Is the claim that 'Sandra Rose lost a court case' regarding EESystem's origins accurate — can the actual case be located?
  • What is the actual recourse or value transfer for prior Theraphi buyers now that the maker calls that product obsolete?
FIELD NOTE

PhiRay is sold through GeometricModels.org, a second commerce hub run by Tufan Guven alongside Dan Winter — distinct from fractalfield.com, which functions more as the theory archive. The product page is unusually transparent about engineering specifics: named engineer Nick Frigge is credited with the magnetic-coil design, and the page includes real technical notes on impedance matching and golden-ratio harmonic spacing.

The core narrative is a supersession story: the maker states Theraphi's manufacturer used an 800kHz carrier wave and half-million-volt drive that deviated from Winter's original design intent, and that PhiRay corrects this. Whether that account of the manufacturing history is accurate is not independently verifiable from the product page alone.

Testimonials are dated and attributed to named individuals (not anonymous), which is more transparent than most entries in this region — but they remain self-reported, uncontrolled, and collected by the seller.

SOURCE: geometricmodels.org/2025/02/09/phiray (scraped 2026-07-09)

THE DATA POINT — WHAT THE ATLAS IS COLLECTING

Has anyone measured PhiRay's field output independently, and what does ownership actually cost after shipping/duties?

Base price $6,900 + shipping ($150 US / $250 Canada / $550 Europe / $750 elsewhere). No independent (non-testimonial) measurement located yet.

Report from the field →