Hello!
My name is Andrew. I am ten years old. I am doing a science fair project on EMFs in cars. Can you please help me with my experiment. What meter should I use for my experiment? Thank you, Andrew PS: This is my mom's address....you can also send the response to my e-mail at: [hidden email] [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
Hi Andrew,
You will find both AC and DC magnetic fields in a car. Therefore, you can use an AC Gaussmeter and/or a DC Gaussmeter See http://www.lessemf.com/gauss.html and http://www.lessemf.com/dcgauss.html respectively. Emil ----- Original Message ----- From: <[hidden email]> To: <[hidden email]> Sent: Friday, November 18, 2005 9:40 AM Subject: [eSens] Science Project Advice > Hello! > > > My name is Andrew. I am ten years old. > I am doing a science fair project on EMFs in cars. Can you please help me > with my experiment. What meter should I use for my experiment? > > > Thank you, > Andrew > > PS: This is my mom's address....you can also send the response to my > at: [hidden email] > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > > > > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > > > > |
In reply to this post by Nosyla2
Andrew,
A Trifield meter ($150?) is useful for measuring electric fields around coils and spark plugs. It is also useful for measuring magnetic flux (Gauss) from ignition coils, window and roof motors, central locking actuators, fans, relays, alternators, wiring, batteries and wheels. As the Trifield's magnetic scale is tuned to 60Hz (50Hz for UK versions) the readings will not be true values but will give you an indication of where to look with more sophisticated meters tuned and calibrated to the sorts of frequencies coming from each device. You may get high magnetic readings from wiring and batteries which are supposed to be 12v DC (and therefore should read zero on Magnetic and too low to be read on the Elelctric scale)but the rectified output from alternators is unlikely to be very smooth producing an AC ripple throughout the wiring and body shell. As the body is used for the return path, any AC current present will be unbalanced. This can create hot-spots throughout the vehicle. The battery is used as a giant capacitor and is used to clean up the supply with varying degrees of success. A good and relatively cheap meter to detect the magnetism from wheels is the Cell-Sensor ($49?) with remote magnetic probe which is useful because you don't have to be near the source if you mount it on a wooden stick. It is less narrowly tuned than the Trifield and better at picking up the lower frequencies of the rotating wheels. You can also stick the sensor head near various sources easily with Blu-Tak. There are other sources of vehicle EMF less well known. Under dash Bluetooth transmitters for detecting the presence of child seats in the front. The Micro-Alert ($90?)should show these up but as it chirps (it does not have a scale) it will not give you any values. Imobiliser transmitters which interrogate a transponder chip in the key and air- bag systems once armed produce a constant signal (at 200Hz I believe). If for any reason the signal is lost (as in an accident when the impact sensors break contact) then the airbags deploy. Then there is RF remote central locking (Some systems use Infra-Red) Anti collision systems use radar beamed at the car in from (Top end Cadilacs, Mercs, BMW's and others have these) and the newer halogen headlights too I believe put out some kind of EMR forwards. Satellite tracking - the little stubby ariel above the rear window or cell- phone antennas (some through the glass). Sports cars sit near the ground and regular trips over buried power cables can affect some people. Modern cars have an IP network running round them but I'm afraid I don't know very much about those. Hopefully someone else will. Galileo |
thats a lot of stuff.
--- In [hidden email], "galileo3315" <galileo1564@b...> wrote: > > Andrew, > > A Trifield meter ($150?) is useful for measuring electric fields > around > coils and spark plugs. It is also useful for measuring magnetic flux > (Gauss) from ignition coils, window and roof motors, central locking > actuators, fans, relays, alternators, wiring, batteries and wheels. > As > the Trifield's magnetic scale is tuned to 60Hz (50Hz for UK > the readings will not be true values but will give you an indication > of > where to look with more sophisticated meters tuned and calibrated to > the sorts of frequencies coming from each device. You may get high > magnetic readings from wiring and batteries which are supposed to be > 12v DC (and therefore should read zero on Magnetic and too low to be > read on the Elelctric scale)but the rectified output from alternators > is unlikely to be very smooth producing an AC ripple throughout the > wiring and body shell. As the body is used for the return path, any > AC > current present will be unbalanced. This can create hot-spots > throughout the vehicle. The battery is used as a giant capacitor and > is > used to clean up the supply with varying degrees of success. > > A good and relatively cheap meter to detect the magnetism from wheels > is the Cell-Sensor ($49?) with remote magnetic probe which is useful > because you don't have to be near the source if you mount it on a > wooden stick. It is less narrowly tuned than the Trifield and better > at > picking up the lower frequencies of the rotating wheels. You can also > stick the sensor head near various sources easily with Blu-Tak. > > There are other sources of vehicle EMF less well known. Under dash > Bluetooth transmitters for detecting the presence of child seats in > the > front. The Micro-Alert ($90?)should show these up but as it chirps > (it > does not have a scale) it will not give you any values. Imobiliser > transmitters which interrogate a transponder chip in the key and air- > bag systems once armed produce a constant signal (at 200Hz I > believe). > If for any reason the signal is lost (as in an accident when the > impact > sensors break contact) then the airbags deploy. > > Then there is RF remote central locking (Some systems use Infra-Red) > Anti collision systems use radar beamed at the car in from (Top end > Cadilacs, Mercs, BMW's and others have these) and the newer halogen > headlights too I believe put out some kind of EMR forwards. > tracking - the little stubby ariel above the rear window or cell- > phone antennas (some through the glass). > > Sports cars sit near the ground and regular trips over buried power > cables can affect some people. > > Modern cars have an IP network running round them but I'm afraid I > don't know very much about those. Hopefully someone else will. > > Galileo > |
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