Delta Drift
The slowest beat we make — the rhythm of deep sleep. For winding all the way down.
From the transmitter room · est. one long night in the archives
For about a year, after programming signed off, our 5,000-watt 780 AM rig carried a quiet experiment through the small hours — four low tones, five minutes each, then all four together, then around again until dawn. The desert slept on it. Now the same tones are yours: synthesized live in your browser, transmitter-clean, exactly as they ran. No medicine, no magic — a good question and a quiet transmitter.
Our signature session — the overnight cycle, reborn. 54 → 72 → 84 → 111 Hz, then all four in chorus, repeating for as long as you leave it on. ↻
Tap any tone above to hold it on its own — no sequence, just that frequency, for as long as you like. ▸ runs the full cycle.
Coherent breathing — about five and a half seconds in, five and a half out, roughly five breaths a minute. Follow the circle; let the tones hold the room.
Headphones or speakers with real low end recommended — 54 Hz simply doesn't exist on a laptop speaker (that's what the octave switch is for). Best lying down, lights low, volume moderate.
Two pure tones, one in each ear, a few hertz apart — your brain hears a slow beat that isn't in either ear. Ours ride a 111 Hz carrier, the top of the Stack. Headphones required — that's physics, not preference.
The slowest beat we make — the rhythm of deep sleep. For winding all the way down.
The dream-edge tempo — where meditation sits. For drifting without sleeping.
The relaxed-and-awake rhythm — eyes closed, mind clear. For a reset between things.
The beat frequencies are real and the stereo separation is true — the research on effects is genuinely mixed, and we're a radio station, not a clinic. Use the console above to sign off or set a timer; one session plays at a time, like one transmitter.
Different doors, same quiet.