Hi,
I'm new to this forum. My name is Debbi and I live in a townhouse in a suburb of Minneapolis, MN. I'm 1200 ft from a water tower with 40 plus cell antennas and at least 5 microwave antennas, new in August, some of which are pulsing at 23 GHz. This number really surprised me when I looked it up on antennasearch.com It seems very high. My symptoms of electrosensitivity are burning and tingling, and I am retired so I'm at home most of the time. I'm looking to shield myself either by using shielding fabric as sheets or curtains, and am wondering if anyone having experience or knowledge about this would share information with me. ArgenMesh fabric from lessemf.com protects to 40Ghz. Its conductivity is <0.5 Ohm per square. Would anyone on this forum know if I were to use this fabric for sheets without grounding it, would there be any problem for me as an electrosensitive? One of the reasons I ask is because the folks at the Earthing Institute said if I were electrosensitive I should go easy on the grounded sheets they sell. Also, would someone please explain how the Ohm measurement related to the need for grounding. Also, I have metal mini-blinds on my windows near where I'm sleeping. They seem to block the rf from nearby neighbors' wifi when they are closed. (I've tested this with my Palm Pilot. I don't use wifi in my home.) I don't know if the metal blinds are protecting or harming me, since some say metal reflects RF. I don't have any RF devices in my sleeping area. Any experience, advice or help you can give would be greatly appreciated... Best regards, Debbi |
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Welcome Debbi,
I don't know the answer to your main question, but I was curious about the following statement: > One of the reasons I ask is because the folks at the Earthing Institute > said if I were electrosensitive I should go easy on the grounded sheets > they sell. Did they elaborate on this? I think we've got more than a few people here using the Earthing grounded sheets, so I'm curious what they do/don't recommend for electrosensitives. Thanks, Marc |
Thanks, Marc for welcoming me to the group. I went through my email in box and found Martin Zucker's email about Earthing Institute's grounded sheets. (See below) I'm reluctant to ground using the outlets in my house as I have high MGauss (stray voltage) readings as I am one of six townhouse units that share the same water pipe and meter, thus the same ground, not to mention the fire sprinkler system we share. (I really don't know for sure if this a problem, but it concerns me.) I can't exactly run a line out of my house into a metal ground outside because of townhouse association rules. Plus, now the ground is frozen pretty solid here in MN - :>) So I'm wondering about using Argenmesh fabric as sheets without grounding them. Anyone know anything about this? Thanks, Debbi (Martin Zucker's email) "Hi Debbi If you are electrosensitive, you would want to start very slowly with Earthing. You might even want to stand or walk or sit outdoors on grass or gravel or sand or unpainted concrete and see how you feel. That is the equivalent of using the Earthing products indoors. If you decide to get an Earthing sheet, make direct skin contact and see how you feel. Some electrosensitive people have to increase their exposure to the Earth's energy very slowly. So take it slow. Regarding rf frequency, rf signals are not attracted to metals. Metals just react to them more than other materials because they are good conductors and have a number of electrons free to move according to the electric field of the rf signal. That is why antennas are made of metal. The movement of electrons inside the metallic antenna can be detected by sensitive electronics and transformed in sounds (radio) or images (TV). The silver in the sheet will not attract more rf signals. Because the electrons in the metal respond to the rf signal, sheets contaning metal will stop the rf signal. In other words, the rf signal does not penetrate much through the sheets. This protects you from them. But the biggest protection the sheets give you is access to the earth's electrons which will neutralize reactive oxygen species (ROS), oxidative agents inside your body that damage your cells (electrons are the source of the neutralizing power of antioxidants). The earth's electrons also carry frequencies that the body uses to synchronizes itself to circadian cycles and other universal cycles (moon cycle, for example). Hope that is helpful Martin Zucker for the Earthing Project" --- In [hidden email], "Marc Martin" <marc@...> wrote: > > Welcome Debbi, > > I don't know the answer to your main question, but I was curious about > the following statement: > > > One of the reasons I ask is because the folks at the Earthing Institute > > said if I were electrosensitive I should go easy on the grounded sheets > > they sell. > > Did they elaborate on this? I think we've got more than a few people > here using the Earthing grounded sheets, so I'm curious what they > do/don't recommend for electrosensitives. > > Thanks, > > Marc > |
In reply to this post by Marc Martin
I think this is the answer, from
http://www.powerwatch.org.uk/library/downloads/es_5_action-20100706.pdf "Another way of reducing the effects of exposure is by attaching a wire to ground from a copper bracelet. However, this is also very likely to increase your exposure to electric fields, as you will become the quickest 'path to earth' for any emitters of electric fields you are near. This may well affect the physical well being of some ES people." However, if you were to turn off the circuit breakers affecting your room's electrical field, then you wouldn't have to worry about it. --- In [hidden email], "Marc Martin" <marc@...> wrote: > > Welcome Debbi, > > I don't know the answer to your main question, but I was curious about > the following statement: > > > One of the reasons I ask is because the folks at the Earthing Institute > > said if I were electrosensitive I should go easy on the grounded sheets > > they sell. > > Did they elaborate on this? I think we've got more than a few people > here using the Earthing grounded sheets, so I'm curious what they > do/don't recommend for electrosensitives. > > Thanks, > > Marc > |
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In reply to this post by hspmn
> Thanks, Marc for welcoming me to the group. I went through my email in
> box and found Martin Zucker's email about Earthing Institute's grounded > sheets. (See below) Thanks Debbi. Interesting. I personally did not like making direct contact with the Earthing ground sheet, so I just have it at the foot of my bed, with a cotton sheet between me and the grounding sheet. I think this works better for me, and perhaps the sheet is diverting some local EMF to ground rather than *me* being the path to ground (via the sheet). Marc |
In reply to this post by hspmn
Walking on the Earth is generally NOT the same as grounding/earthing
indoors. The reason is simple: Outdoors there are no sources of strong electric field (aka high voltage). Indoors there will be voltage present, in all the wires and appliances (assuming they are not turned off at the breaker). Remember, as I have said over and over, electric field is voltage (V) divided by distance (m) or V/m. When you introduce a ground near a voltage, you have decreased m between the voltage a ground. This increases the electric field in that space. There are several ways around this. 1- before doing grounding, check with an electric field meter. Locate sources of voltage relative to the position of the ground. Put the ground BETWEEN yourself and the voltage. 2- if you are between 2 (or more) voltages, you may need 2 (or more)grounds. In a bed setting, that means putting your self BETWEEN 2 grounding sheets. Emil ----- Original Message ----- From: "hspmn" <[hidden email]> To: <[hidden email]> Sent: Sunday, January 23, 2011 9:10 PM Subject: [eSens] Re: Shielding for 23 Ghz Wimax? Need help, please. > > > > > > Thanks, Marc for welcoming me to the group. I went through my email in > box and found Martin Zucker's email about Earthing Institute's grounded > sheets. (See below) > > I'm reluctant to ground using the outlets in my house as I have high > MGauss (stray voltage) readings as I am one of six townhouse units that > share the same water pipe and meter, thus the same ground, not to mention > the fire sprinkler system we share. (I really don't know for sure if this > a problem, but it concerns me.) I can't exactly run a line out of my house > into a metal ground outside because of townhouse association rules. Plus, > now the ground is frozen pretty solid here in MN - :>) > > So I'm wondering about using Argenmesh fabric as sheets without grounding > them. > Anyone know anything about this? > > Thanks, > Debbi > > > (Martin Zucker's email) > "Hi Debbi > If you are electrosensitive, you would want to start very slowly with > Earthing. You might even want to stand or walk or sit outdoors on grass > or gravel or sand or unpainted concrete and see how you feel. That is the > equivalent of using the Earthing products indoors. > If you decide to get an Earthing sheet, make direct skin contact and see > how you feel. Some electrosensitive people have to increase their > exposure to the Earth's energy very slowly. So take it slow. > Regarding rf frequency, rf signals are not attracted to metals. Metals > just react to them more than other materials because they are good > conductors and have a number of electrons free to move according to the > electric field of the rf signal. That is why antennas are made of metal. > The movement of electrons inside the metallic antenna can be detected by > sensitive electronics and transformed in sounds (radio) or images (TV). > The silver in the sheet will not attract more rf signals. Because the > electrons in the metal respond to the rf signal, sheets contaning metal > will stop the rf signal. In other words, the rf signal does not penetrate > much through the sheets. This protects you from them. But the biggest > protection the sheets give you is access to the earth's electrons which > will neutralize reactive oxygen species (ROS), oxidative agents inside > your body that damage your cells (electrons are the source of the > neutralizing power of antioxidants). The earth's electrons also carry > frequencies that the body uses to synchronizes itself to circadian cycles > and other universal cycles (moon cycle, for example). > Hope that is helpful > Martin Zucker for the Earthing Project" > > --- In [hidden email], "Marc Martin" <marc@...> wrote: >> >> Welcome Debbi, >> >> I don't know the answer to your main question, but I was curious about >> the following statement: >> >> > One of the reasons I ask is because the folks at the Earthing Institute >> > said if I were electrosensitive I should go easy on the grounded sheets >> > they sell. >> >> Did they elaborate on this? I think we've got more than a few people >> here using the Earthing grounded sheets, so I'm curious what they >> do/don't recommend for electrosensitives. >> >> Thanks, >> >> Marc >> > > > > > ------------------------------------ > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > > |
In reply to this post by hspmn
23 GHz is very high. I suspect it's a misprint as 2.4 GHz is
very common. 23 would travel very line of sight, and would not penetrate very far beyond your skin (but might cause tingling in the skin?) Grounding is less important at higher frequencies in terms of reflecting the signal. But grounding can be important for safety, if the curtain gets pushed into an electrical plug or something. It's possible for an ungrounded metal object to resonate, so that's another reason, but to prevent that you need a low inductance path to ground, so no long wires (use a strap about 8 times longer than it is wide). Fabrics and screens have to be very fine to get up to that high frequency, but foils will work fine, often all the way up to visible light. On Sun, Jan 23, 2011 at 4:50 PM, hspmn <[hidden email]> wrote: > > > Hi, > > I'm new to this forum. My name is Debbi and I live in a townhouse in a > suburb of Minneapolis, MN. I'm 1200 ft from a water tower with 40 plus cell > antennas and at least 5 microwave antennas, new in August, some of which are > pulsing at 23 GHz. This number really surprised me when I looked it up on > antennasearch.com It seems very high. > > My symptoms of electrosensitivity are burning and tingling, and I am > retired so I'm at home most of the time. I'm looking to shield myself either > by using shielding fabric as sheets or curtains, and am wondering if anyone > having experience or knowledge about this would share information with me. > > ArgenMesh fabric from lessemf.com protects to 40Ghz. Its conductivity is > <0.5 Ohm per square. Would anyone on this forum > know if I were to use this fabric for sheets without grounding it, would > there be any problem for me as an electrosensitive? > > One of the reasons I ask is because the folks at the Earthing Institute > said if I were electrosensitive I should go easy on the grounded sheets they > sell. > > Also, would someone please explain how the Ohm measurement related to the > need for grounding. > > Also, I have metal mini-blinds on my windows near where I'm sleeping. They > seem to block the rf from nearby neighbors' wifi when they are closed. (I've > tested this with my Palm Pilot. I don't use wifi in my home.) I don't know > if the metal blinds are protecting or harming me, since some say metal > reflects RF. I don't have any RF devices in my sleeping area. > > Any experience, advice or help you can give would be greatly appreciated... > > Best regards, > Debbi > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] ------------------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/eSens/ <*> Your email settings: Individual Email | Traditional <*> To change settings online go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/eSens/join (Yahoo! ID required) <*> To change settings via email: [hidden email] [hidden email] <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: [hidden email] <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ |
Hi Bill,
Thanks for responding. I wish it were a misprint, but it's not... here's the data from antennasearch.com for the Clearwire antennas near my home: EmmitterClassFreq(Num)Freq(Mhz)Power(Output)Power(Radiated)1FXO111,055.N\ ANA2FXO123,125.NANA 223,275.NANA3FXO123,075.NANA 223,225.NANA4FXO119,375.NANA It's good to know grounding is not important at higher frequencies. Which leads me to wonder is grounding important for the lower cell phone antenna frequencies ? I've decided to experiment with turning off my circuits in the sleeping area at night. If no electrical fields are being generated, would that eliminate my need for a ground? Best regards, Debbi --- In [hidden email], Bill Bruno <wbruno@...> wrote: > > 23 GHz is very high. I suspect it's a misprint as 2.4 GHz is > very common. 23 would travel very line of sight, and would > not penetrate very far beyond your skin (but might cause tingling > in the skin?) > > Grounding is less important at higher frequencies in terms > of reflecting the signal. But grounding can be important for > safety, if the curtain gets pushed into an electrical plug or something. > It's possible for an ungrounded metal object to resonate, so > that's another reason, but to prevent that you need a low inductance > path to ground, so no long wires (use a strap about 8 times longer > than it is wide). > > Fabrics and screens have to be very fine to get up to that > high frequency, but foils will work fine, often all the way up to > visible light. > > > On Sun, Jan 23, 2011 at 4:50 PM, hspmn brudedj@... wrote: > > > > > > > Hi, > > > > I'm new to this forum. My name is Debbi and I live in a townhouse in > > suburb of Minneapolis, MN. I'm 1200 ft from a water tower with 40 plus cell > > antennas and at least 5 microwave antennas, new in August, some of which are > > pulsing at 23 GHz. This number really surprised me when I looked it up on > > antennasearch.com It seems very high. > > > > My symptoms of electrosensitivity are burning and tingling, and I am > > retired so I'm at home most of the time. I'm looking to shield myself either > > by using shielding fabric as sheets or curtains, and am wondering if anyone > > having experience or knowledge about this would share information with me. > > > > ArgenMesh fabric from lessemf.com protects to 40Ghz. Its conductivity is > > <0.5 Ohm per square. Would anyone on this forum > > know if I were to use this fabric for sheets without grounding it, would > > there be any problem for me as an electrosensitive? > > > > One of the reasons I ask is because the folks at the Earthing Institute > > said if I were electrosensitive I should go easy on the grounded sheets they > > sell. > > > > Also, would someone please explain how the Ohm measurement related to the > > need for grounding. > > > > Also, I have metal mini-blinds on my windows near where I'm sleeping. They > > seem to block the rf from nearby neighbors' wifi when they are closed. (I've > > tested this with my Palm Pilot. I don't use wifi in my home.) I don't know > > if the metal blinds are protecting or harming me, since some say metal > > reflects RF. I don't have any RF devices in my sleeping area. > > > > Any experience, advice or help you can give would be greatly appreciated... > > > > Best regards, > > Debbi > > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by Emil at Less EMF Inc
Thanks, Emil, that's very helpful.
I suppose the other reason why grounding has been advised is related to reduction of static electricity? But I suppose the other solution is to use natural fabrics like cotton instead of synthetic fabrics. --- In [hidden email], "Emil at Less EMF Inc" <lessemf@...> wrote: > > Walking on the Earth is generally NOT the same as grounding/earthing > indoors. The reason is simple: Outdoors there are no sources of strong > electric field (aka high voltage). Indoors there will be voltage present, in > all the wires and appliances (assuming they are not turned off at the > breaker). > > Remember, as I have said over and over, electric field is voltage (V) > divided by distance (m) or V/m. When you introduce a ground near a voltage, > you have decreased m between the voltage a ground. This increases the > electric field in that space. > > There are several ways around this. > 1- before doing grounding, check with an electric field meter. Locate > sources of voltage relative to the position of the ground. Put the ground > BETWEEN yourself and the voltage. > > 2- if you are between 2 (or more) voltages, you may need 2 (or more)grounds. > In a bed setting, that means putting your self BETWEEN 2 grounding sheets. > > Emil > |
In reply to this post by BiBrun
According to Wikipedia, looks like WiMAX is typically lower in frequency (e.g., 2.3 GHz), but the original standard specified up to 66 GHz, so theoretically 23 GHz Wimax is a possibility:
From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WiMAX: "There is no uniform global licensed spectrum for WiMAX, however the WiMAX Forum has published three licensed spectrum profiles: 2.3 GHz, 2.5 GHz and 3.5 GHz, in an effort to drive standardisation and decrease cost." "The original version of the standard on which WiMAX is based (IEEE 802.16) specified a physical layer operating in the 10 to 66 GHz range. 802.16a, updated in 2004 to 802.16-2004, added specifications for the 2 to 11 GHz range." --- In [hidden email], Bill Bruno <wbruno@...> wrote: > > 23 GHz is very high. I suspect it's a misprint as 2.4 GHz is > very common. 23 would travel very line of sight, and would > not penetrate very far beyond your skin (but might cause tingling > in the skin?) > > Grounding is less important at higher frequencies in terms > of reflecting the signal. But grounding can be important for > safety, if the curtain gets pushed into an electrical plug or something. > It's possible for an ungrounded metal object to resonate, so > that's another reason, but to prevent that you need a low inductance > path to ground, so no long wires (use a strap about 8 times longer > than it is wide). > > Fabrics and screens have to be very fine to get up to that > high frequency, but foils will work fine, often all the way up to > visible light. > |
--- At 06:47 PM 24, 24 01 2011, emraware wrote: > >According to Wikipedia, looks like WiMAX is typically lower in frequency (e.g., 2.3 GHz), but the original standard specified up to 66 GHz, so theoretically 23 GHz Wimax is a possibility: > > From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WiMAX: >"There is no uniform global licensed spectrum for WiMAX, however the WiMAX Forum has published three licensed spectrum profiles: 2.3 GHz, 2.5 GHz and 3.5 GHz, in an effort to drive standardisation and decrease cost." > >"The original version of the standard on which WiMAX is based (IEEE 802.16) specified a physical layer operating in the 10 to 66 GHz range. 802.16a, updated in 2004 to 802.16-2004, added specifications for the 2 to 11 GHz range." Hi, My first time posting here. Apparently 23 GHz is a standard for telecommunications network "backhaul", that is used to link base stations to the "core network". Backhaul: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backhaul_%28telecommunications%29 ......... http://www.telecomengine.com/International/article.asp?HH_ID=AR_2351 Microwave Backhaul Comparison Chart... 2.5 - 80 GHz http://www.wisptech.com/index.php/Microwave_Backhaul_Comparison_Chart Point-to-Point Wireless and Backhaul - a PDF Brochure: <http://www.motorola.com/web/Business/Products/Wireless%20Networks/Wireless%20Broadband%20Networks/Point-to-Point/_Documents/staticfiles/BRO_PTP_Portfolio%20Overview.pdf?localeId=33> Google: - 23 Ghz microwave backhaul http://www.google.com/search?q=23+Ghz+microwave+backhaul John > > |
In reply to this post by hspmn
Hi Debbi,
23 GHz is very high, and would not be used for WiMax to consumers _inside_ the home. Those frequencies are only used for point to point between towers, and direct line of sight from satellite dishes up to satellites. Tall hilltops are frequently populated with little round microwave dishes pointed at the next hilltop miles away. The Upload frequency for Wildblue internet is 29.5 - 30.0 GHz for example, and Downlink is 19.7 - 20.2 GHz. Those dishes are all too common in rural areas with no DSL or fiber options for consumers. 1200 ft sounds too close to shield sufficiently. It depends on how sensitive you are though. Stewart hspmn wrote: > I'm 1200 ft from a water tower with 40 plus cell antennas and at least 5 microwave antennas, new in August, some of which are pulsing at 23 GHz. This number really surprised me when I looked it up on antennasearch.com It seems very high. > > > |
A few weeks ago, a new satellite was launched.
Its intended use is for internet via satellite. K Band: 18-26,5 GHz. Ka Band goes from 26,5-40 GHz. Greetings, Charles Claessens member Verband Baubiologie www.milieuziektes.nl www.milieuziektes.be www.hetbitje.nl checked by Norton ----- Original Message ----- From: S Andreason To: [hidden email] Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2011 5:38 PM Subject: Re: [eSens] Shielding for 23 Ghz Wimax? Need help, please. Hi Debbi, 23 GHz is very high, and would not be used for WiMax to consumers _inside_ the home. Those frequencies are only used for point to point between towers, and direct line of sight from satellite dishes up to satellites. Tall hilltops are frequently populated with little round microwave dishes pointed at the next hilltop miles away. The Upload frequency for Wildblue internet is 29.5 - 30.0 GHz for example, and Downlink is 19.7 - 20.2 GHz. Those dishes are all too common in rural areas with no DSL or fiber options for consumers. 1200 ft sounds too close to shield sufficiently. It depends on how sensitive you are though. Stewart hspmn wrote: > I'm 1200 ft from a water tower with 40 plus cell antennas and at least 5 microwave antennas, new in August, some of which are pulsing at 23 GHz. This number really surprised me when I looked it up on antennasearch.com It seems very high. > > > ------------------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Links [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by hspmn
1000m would be best and even then make sure you are not in line of site or
lobe spread puk In a message dated 25/01/2011 16:57:12 GMT Standard Time, [hidden email] writes: hspmn wrote: > I'm 1200 ft from a water tower with 40 plus cell antennas and at least 5 microwave antennas, new in August, some of which are pulsing at 23 GHz. This number really surprised me when I looked it up on antennasearch.com It seems very high. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by Marc Martin
Hi Marc,
Appreciated your followup comment on E-Sens- interesting that you don't have direct contact with the grounding sheet, and use a cotton sheet between you and it. Curious whether this was an intuitive decision, or if you had a reference or advice about doing it this way. Or, did you mean it didn't feel good to touch it directly. Also curious about whether or not you have measured your body voltage while using your system - before & after, or any other combination... with or without sheet between... I'm in a beginner mode here, trying to make some good decisions about protecting myself without harming myself - thankful for any info you may provide. Best regards, Debbi --- In [hidden email], "Marc Martin" <marc@...> wrote: > > > Thanks, Marc for welcoming me to the group. I went through my email in > > box and found Martin Zucker's email about Earthing Institute's grounded > > sheets. (See below) > > Thanks Debbi. Interesting. > > I personally did not like making direct contact with the Earthing ground > sheet, so I just have it at the foot of my bed, with a cotton sheet between > me and the grounding sheet. I think this works better for me, and perhaps > the sheet is diverting some local EMF to ground rather than *me* being > the path to ground (via the sheet). > > Marc > |
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> Appreciated your followup comment on E-Sens- interesting that you
> don't have direct contact with the grounding sheet, and use a cotton > sheet between you and it. Curious whether this was an intuitive > decision, or if you had a reference or advice about doing it this > way. No reference... this is just something I tried, because I found myself feeling "electrified" (agitated) when I made direct contact with the grounding sheet. Mostly what I was doing what trying to put the grounding sheet between me and the space heater in the bedroom, in the hopes that some of the EMF from the space heater would get "diverted" by the grounding sheet. And I think this might be why I feel better with it at the foot of the bed, on top of the sheet. > Also curious about whether or not you have measured your body voltage > while using your system - before & after, or any other combination... > with or without sheet between... No, I don't even have anything to measure that... Marc |
In reply to this post by S Andreason
Hi Stuart, Thanks for the info re: the high frequency distribution. Why do you say 1200 ft sounds too close to shield sufficiently? Do you have a reference for this? Thanks, Debbi --- In [hidden email], S Andreason <sandreas41@...> wrote: > > Hi Debbi, > > 23 GHz is very high, and would not be used for WiMax to consumers > _inside_ the home. Those frequencies are only used for point to point > between towers, and direct line of sight from satellite dishes up to > satellites. > Tall hilltops are frequently populated with little round microwave > dishes pointed at the next hilltop miles away. > The Upload frequency for Wildblue internet is 29.5 - 30.0 GHz for > example, and Downlink is 19.7 - 20.2 GHz. Those dishes are all too > common in rural areas with no DSL or fiber options for consumers. > > 1200 ft sounds too close to shield sufficiently. It depends on how > sensitive you are though. > > Stewart > > hspmn wrote: > > I'm 1200 ft from a water tower with 40 plus cell antennas and at least 5 microwave antennas, new in August, some of which are pulsing at 23 GHz. This number really surprised me when I looked it up on antennasearch.com It seems very high. > > > > > > > |
In reply to this post by PUK
Hi Paul, Re: the 1000 m (.625 miles) as being the best distance from cell towers, do you have any references for this number? Also, any references about how the height of the tower relates to the RF distribution - the Clearwire microwave antennas are at 145 ft on the water tower, (antennasearch.com) I own the townhouse - want to leave, but need to find another place that is safer. Thanks, Debbi --- In [hidden email], paulpjc@... wrote: > > 1000m would be best and even then make sure you are not in line of site or > lobe spread > > puk > > > In a message dated 25/01/2011 16:57:12 GMT Standard Time, > charles@... writes: > > hspmn wrote: > > I'm 1200 ft from a water tower with 40 plus cell antennas and at least 5 > microwave antennas, new in August, some of which are pulsing at 23 GHz. > This number really surprised me when I looked it up on antennasearch.com It > seems very high. > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > |
In reply to this post by JD
Thanks, John for posting these references... the backhaul concept fits, as these antennas are mounted on a very high water tower.... --- In [hidden email], John <emailresearch@...> wrote: > > > --- At 06:47 PM 24, 24 01 2011, emraware wrote: > > > >According to Wikipedia, looks like WiMAX is typically lower in frequency (e.g., 2.3 GHz), but the original standard specified up to 66 GHz, so theoretically 23 GHz Wimax is a possibility: > > > > From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WiMAX: > >"There is no uniform global licensed spectrum for WiMAX, however the WiMAX Forum has published three licensed spectrum profiles: 2.3 GHz, 2.5 GHz and 3.5 GHz, in an effort to drive standardisation and decrease cost." > > > >"The original version of the standard on which WiMAX is based (IEEE 802.16) specified a physical layer operating in the 10 to 66 GHz range. 802.16a, updated in 2004 to 802.16-2004, added specifications for the 2 to 11 GHz range." > > > Hi, > > My first time posting here. > > Apparently 23 GHz is a standard for telecommunications network "backhaul", > that is used to link base stations to the "core network". > > Backhaul: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backhaul_%28telecommunications%29 > ......... http://www.telecomengine.com/International/article.asp?HH_ID=AR_2351 > > Microwave Backhaul Comparison Chart... 2.5 - 80 GHz > http://www.wisptech.com/index.php/Microwave_Backhaul_Comparison_Chart > > Point-to-Point Wireless and Backhaul - a PDF Brochure: > <http://www.motorola.com/web/Business/Products/Wireless%20Networks/Wireless%20Broadband%20Networks/Point-to-Point/_Documents/staticfiles/BRO_PTP_Portfolio%20Overview.pdf?localeId=33> > > Google: - 23 Ghz microwave backhaul > http://www.google.com/search?q=23+Ghz+microwave+backhaul > > > John > > > > > > > > |
In reply to this post by hspmn
Hi Debbi,
Just from experience, shielding helps, but can not replace getting away from the "bombardment" of emf. As I wrote on my ehs page, I need 1000 ft. away from one wifi to feel much better, 300 ft. from cel phones and 1.5 miles from cel-towers to not be pained by them, and 1/4 mile away from power lines to not "hear" the buzzing, which corresponds to electric fields (body voltage on multimeter) moreso than magnetic field, which has a much shorter distance. In my story, I have been on the ridge above home, in clear line of sight with a tower 7 miles away, and it hurts me significantly up there. Also standing on the southern ridge, I am in line of sight with all the neighbors satellite dishes in the valley bottom, pointed just over the hill toward the satellites in orbit, so if anybody is transmitting via satellite internet, I would also be getting a higher dose of 25-30 GHz. <sarcasm> makes you really want to go hiking to hilltops to see the view, eh? </sarcasm> But travel up the valley floor toward the national forest where there is no cel-service, and my symptoms go down to near normal in an hour or two. So when you say you have 40 plus antennas at close range, I despair to find no easy solutions to share with you to help. Stewart http://seahorseCorral.org/ehs1.html hspmn wrote: > Hi Stuart, > Thanks for the info re: the high frequency distribution. Why do you say 1200 ft sounds too close to shield sufficiently? Do you have a reference for this? Thanks, Debbi > |
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