Any where I go in Berkeley and Oakland, including at the Lawrence Hall of Science, all along Skyline Blvd, or practically everywhere in Berkeley or Oakland California, I can see on my Cornet meter EMF spikes that are exactly 20 seconds apart. These are "twin" spikes of roughly equal power constantly 20 seconds apart, detectable at all times. Each of them can be as high as 30,000 µW/m2, or often around 600 µW/m2, depending on location. I don't think they come from household smart meters. Are they from the electrical distribution meters - those big round cylinders mounted on lamp posts? I can see those cylinders everywhere, every 100 feet, all around Berkeley Oakland.
I am eager to hear from anyone on this mystery. |
Are you sure, that they are not radar spikes?
Greetings, Charles Claessens member Verband Baubiologie www.milieuziektes.nl www.milieuziektes.be www.hetbitje.nl checked by Norton ----- Original Message ----- From: knowemf To: [hidden email] Sent: Monday, June 27, 2011 10:10 AM Subject: [eSens] Berkeley / Oakland, CA - Mysterious Constant EMF Spikes 20 seconds apart Any where I go in Berkeley and Oakland, including at the Lawrence Hall of Science, all along Skyline Blvd, or practically everywhere in Berkeley or Oakland California, I can see on my Cornet meter EMF spikes that are exactly 20 seconds apart. These are "twin" spikes of roughly equal power constantly 20 seconds apart, detectable at all times. Each of them can be as high as 30,000 µW/m2, or often around 600 µW/m2, depending on location. I don't think they come from household smart meters. Are they from the electrical distribution meters - those big round cylinders mounted on lamp posts? I can see those cylinders everywhere, every 100 feet, all around Berkeley Oakland. I am eager to hear from anyone on this mystery. ------------------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Links [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by knowemf
knowemf wrote:
> spikes that are exactly 20 seconds apart. These are "twin" spikes of roughly equal power constantly 20 seconds apart, detectable at all times. Each of them can be as high as 30,000 µW/m2, or often around 600 µW/m2, depending on location. I don't think they come from household smart meters. No > Are they from the electrical distribution meters - those big round cylinders mounted on lamp posts? No > I can see those cylinders everywhere, every 100 feet, all around Berkeley Oakland. > > That sounds like WiFi access points. Should get higher "background" numbers near them. > I am eager to hear from anyone on this mystery. > Sounds like a radar sweep from KSFO or KOAK. The best way to pin it down, is exactly like I did on my page http://seahorseCorral.org/ehs1.html (search within my page for "Creston") when detecting the periodic spike as far west as Creston, 50 miles away from Spokane KGEG When on the highway; when topping a hill, the measurement would go up, and as I got closer to the source, the numbers also went up. Hills do provide good shadows to determine direction, as long as there are not tall rocky hills, buildings, trees, to reflect the signal back and all around like ripple waves in a pond, or if you have seen the animation of the Japan tsunami across the Pacific Ocean. The term "backscatter" gains a new understanding. Stewart |
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