Hi Guys I'm posting this again. really need some help. : central heating boiler.

classic Classic list List threaded Threaded
3 messages Options
Reply | Threaded
Open this post in threaded view
|

Hi Guys I'm posting this again. really need some help. : central heating boiler.

betty A





Well, where to start, had just begun to feel as if I was getting on top of
things, when hey presto our central heating boiler gets replaced ( was 20 years
old) Since the new one got fitted I have been feeling sick all the time in the
house,with no areas unaffected it is literally like being in a  microwave. The heating engineer said the only thing he had
replaced was the boiler, which was hooked up to the house's existing electrics.
But it just feels as if the space, ( and therefore me) is being overwhelmed
with weird energetics even when the boiler is not powering up. The
RF meter doesn't register anything new( mine goes up to 3 ghz) and the lf meter
ranges from 0.05 ut when the thing is off to 1.7 to 3.0 ut when it is on. These
values drop immediately the further the meter is from the boiler. Could anyone
proffer an explanation as to what is going on, as my house now feels like a
living hell. Could this be dirty electricity? I am desperate, so any feedback
would be appreciated.



NB I have the heating engineer now as we speak, and he is looking at em as if I have lost my mind. Any ideas ?

Thanks

Reply | Threaded
Open this post in threaded view
|

Re: Hi Guys I'm posting this again. really need some help. : central heating boiler.

S Andreason
betty_starbuckle wrote:
> The RF meter doesn't register anything new( mine goes up to 3 ghz) and the lf meter
> ranges from 0.05 ut when the thing is off to 1.7 to 3.0 ut when it is on.
17 to 30 milliGauss is very bad, but at close range this is generally
normal. The magnetic field should be limited to a bubble of only a few feet.
I don't know how it could affect the entire building without being RF or
EMR from new electronics if that is all that was changed out. I would
guess it to be dirty electricity.

Can you check the 4 corners of the building for a buzzing noise on a
battery powered AM radio?
It is the next best thing to using a GS meter for measuring dirty
electricity directly.

Your description of the effects sound like when we installed a new
energy efficient water heater. It went back, and we bought a simple and
ordinary model for the new house. That was before I had any RF meters,
so I can only speculate as to the cause/mechanism.


> NB I have the heating engineer now as we speak, and he is looking at em as if I have lost my mind. Any ideas ?
>  
I doubt he is trained to understand magnetic fields, but you might get a
bit of understanding if you say "ground loop"  But that would only be
useful if the problem is a ground loop. Need to know what the cause is
first, and that may not be his area of expertise.

Stewart

--
http://seahorseCorral.org


Reply | Threaded
Open this post in threaded view
|

Re: Hi Guys I'm posting this again. really need some help. : central heating boiler.

bobbibb2001
In reply to this post by betty A

Here is a little string to pull to see if it helps.

I am starting to sort out electrical theory (since the solution to anything that you are being badly effected by is to learn all you can about it) and there seems to be a BIG misunderstanding about how to correctly wire things. I'm still sorting this out and I wouldn't post this information yet if you weren't desperate, so this information is NOT complete. But, here is the gist of the matter.

There are THREE legs to residential alternating current. Positive, negative and a ground. There is also something referred to as "neutral." Sometimes neutral refers to the negative leg and sometimes it refers to the ground. (this is also a matter of confusion for most people, so beware of using the term: neutral.)

When one puts in some new wiring, you need to also connect to a ground. Ideally, you run a new wire from the thing you just installed, to the ground (an actual metal stake in the ground outside your house that was installed when the house was built). BUT, you can also make the electrical machine work if you just attach the ground to a water pipe. This will "ground" the machine, but it will also send the electricity through your entire house via the pipes.

This is my partial understanding of the matter. You can read more about this at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground_%28electricity%29

So, I would just check with the installer on the wiring and how did he ground it.

I hope I have not confused you on this matter since I am trying to sort it out myself.

Bobbi


--- In [hidden email], "betty_starbuckle" <betty_starbuckle@...> wrote:

>
>
>
>
>
>
> Well, where to start, had just begun to feel as if I was getting on top of
> things, when hey presto our central heating boiler gets replaced ( was 20 years
> old) Since the new one got fitted I have been feeling sick all the time in the
> house,with no areas unaffected it is literally like being in a  microwave. The heating engineer said the only thing he had
> replaced was the boiler, which was hooked up to the house's existing electrics.
> But it just feels as if the space, ( and therefore me) is being overwhelmed
> with weird energetics even when the boiler is not powering up. The
> RF meter doesn't register anything new( mine goes up to 3 ghz) and the lf meter
> ranges from 0.05 ut when the thing is off to 1.7 to 3.0 ut when it is on. These
> values drop immediately the further the meter is from the boiler. Could anyone
> proffer an explanation as to what is going on, as my house now feels like a
> living hell. Could this be dirty electricity? I am desperate, so any feedback
> would be appreciated.
>
>
>
> NB I have the heating engineer now as we speak, and he is looking at em as if I have lost my mind. Any ideas ?
>
> Thanks
>