seriously, in addition, the Brown patent without actually mentioning it, makes use of ORMEes in the form of Fe and Ni, which through the electrolysis and the alkali metal hydroxide are placed in the high spin state. Meyer never mentions the cruciality of using alkali metal hydroxide and thereby excludes the need for Monatomic Material in the splitter, and thereby skips the concept of a monatomic gas burning (atomic heat providing) flame. Single atoms in an evenly balanced s-ORME group provide a better electrode. Go read the Hudson Patent GB2219995 before you read up on electrolysis using ordinary T-metals. Anyway, we are not here to speculate, that time is Over, and now we are dealing with refining a finished product. Speculaters should leave this group and do their homework or either wait till the finished plans have been posted on John Bedini's Tesla Switch page. Those who are willing to take the problem of frequency generation at face value are those who should reply. This thing being already done, a single chip driver needs to be made at the exact Puharich specified freq of 63.25khz on the msb of the nibble counter, and 1/2,/1/4,1/8 summed up by four resistors on four pins RB(0-3) to generate a single wire having the prescribed Puharich frequencies. There is no problem doing that. The next problem is to place the driver for the Tesla Switch as a decrement or subtract by R routine in the same increment loop as the Puharich loop, and take the output of that when it has count down to zero and toggle Tesla switch pin RB(4) and complement RB(5). Now RB(6) and RB(7) are inputs for two pushbuttons which channel a bounceless switch routine that changes a number R up or down, that number is the one that the one that should be used by decrement or subtract routine above! In this way, the Tesla Switch frequency can be variable, while the Puharich switch is fixed. Why am I integrating a Tesla Switch with a water splitter? To ease up on the battery, since most invariably, a battery will be used. I am sure you would do the same.