This looked interesting, and some of it can be made at home for cheap, suchas the one for
use in a car. It's basically a wire with a 1 megohm resistor to a piece of conductive material and a plug to go in the grounding hole in your 12V socket. The conductive material could just be a lot of fine wire attached (glued orsewn) to the bottom of a seat pad. http://www.sleepingearthed.com/index.html http://www.lessemf.com/personal.html William |
Dear William: This is exactly what I am looking for and why I persevere in this group. I must have real down to earth practical help like this. I am just loving this email info. I now need inexpensive absorber of ambient atmospheric transmitted rf waves between 8900mhz and 14000mhz. My shielding has not worked so far in the above, and with the mobility of these transmitters locally, I need a mobile absorber/converter so that I can not be reducedto tears on a daily basis.
I cannot afford 600 dollars to use the paint on the website someone provided. Additional info privately if necessary. Thanks. Peggy -----Original Message----- From: [hidden email] To: [hidden email] Sent: Mon, 25 Dec 2006 1:09 PM Subject: [eSens] Simple stuff This looked interesting, and some of it can be made at home for cheap, suchas the one for use in a car. It's basically a wire with a 1 megohm resistor to a piece of conductive material and a plug to go in the grounding hole in your 12V socket. The conductive material could just be a lot of fine wire attached (glued orsewn) to the bottom of a seat pad. http://www.sleepingearthed.com/index.html http://www.lessemf.com/personal.html William ________________________________________________________________________ Check out the new AOL. Most comprehensive set of free safety and security tools, free access to millions of high-quality videos from across the web, free AOL Mail and more. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
Rf waves between 8900mhz and 14000mz ??
How do you know that? Greetings, Charles Claessens member Verband Baubiologie www.milieuziektes.nl www.milieuziektes.be www.hetbitje.nl checked by Norton Antivirus ----- Original Message ----- From: <[hidden email]> To: <[hidden email]> Sent: Tuesday, December 26, 2006 15:08 Subject: Re: [eSens] Simple stuff > Dear William: This is exactly what I am looking for and why I persevere in > this group. I must have real down to earth practical help like this. I am > just loving this email info. I now need inexpensive absorber of ambient > atmospheric transmitted rf waves between 8900mhz and 14000mhz. My > shielding has not worked so far in the above, and with the mobility of > these transmitters locally, I need a mobile absorber/converter so that I > can not be reduced to tears on a daily basis. > I cannot afford 600 dollars to use the paint on the website someone > provided. Additional info privately if necessary. Thanks. Peggy > > > > -----Original Message----- > From: [hidden email] > To: [hidden email] > Sent: Mon, 25 Dec 2006 1:09 PM > Subject: [eSens] Simple stuff > > > This looked interesting, and some of it can be made at home for cheap, > such as the one for > use in a car. > It's basically a wire with a 1 megohm resistor to a piece of conductive > material and a plug to > go in the grounding hole in your 12V socket. > The conductive material could just be a lot of fine wire attached (glued > or sewn) to the > bottom of a seat pad. > > http://www.sleepingearthed.com/index.html > > http://www.lessemf.com/personal.html > > William |
In reply to this post by pegpare9
I would be interested in knowing what kind of shielding you are using so far and also what kind of meter you are using to determine the frequencies. I hope you can help. Thanks.
----- Original Message ----- From: [hidden email] To: [hidden email] Sent: Tuesday, December 26, 2006 8:08 AM Subject: Re: [eSens] Simple stuff Dear William: This is exactly what I am looking for and why I persevere in this group. I must have real down to earth practical help like this. I amjust loving this email info. I now need inexpensive absorber of ambient atmospheric transmitted rf waves between 8900mhz and 14000mhz. My shielding has not worked so far in the above, and with the mobility of these transmitters locally, I need a mobile absorber/converter so that I can not be reduced to tears on a daily basis. I cannot afford 600 dollars to use the paint on the website someone provided. Additional info privately if necessary. Thanks. Peggy -----Original Message----- From: [hidden email] To: [hidden email] Sent: Mon, 25 Dec 2006 1:09 PM Subject: [eSens] Simple stuff This looked interesting, and some of it can be made at home for cheap, such as the one for use in a car. It's basically a wire with a 1 megohm resistor to a piece of conductive material and a plug to go in the grounding hole in your 12V socket. The conductive material could just be a lot of fine wire attached (glued or sewn) to the bottom of a seat pad. http://www.sleepingearthed.com/index.html http://www.lessemf.com/personal.html William __________________________________________________________ Check out the new AOL. Most comprehensive set of free safety and securitytools, free access to millions of high-quality videos from across the web,free AOL Mail and more. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
Warning: this is all speculation, but I think it makes sense - starts with why I like living in a
forest. So, what's a forest? Lots of trees, and it's wild where I live. So? Living trees are full of elctrolytes, which are conductors, and grounded through their roots. This must be makiing a shield against various forms of radiated energy. For those who don't live in a forest and do have a house, how about planting ivy (maybe on a frame so it doesn't mess with the walls)? Should do some good. In an apartment, I've seen a whole wall of some kind of ivy-like climbing plant fed by hydroponic, and the usual grow lights. The hydroponic should be grounded toa power ground. Should do the same thing. Does anyone know of experience with this? William |
This is basically correct. Trees are also full of water, which is a very
effective absorber of microwave and other EM radiation. Lots of ES people find that forest/lake areas are very benign in terms of EMF exposure (including my wife who slept in a tent in nearby wooded lakes on and off over a few months when her ES was at its worst - it definitely helped). Another angle is that companies and individuals have sometimes had to cut back trees to improve mobile phone or satellite TV reception. Ian _____ From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of skrzn Sent: 27 December 2006 20:21 To: [hidden email] Subject: [eSens] Re: Simple stuff Warning: this is all speculation, but I think it makes sense - starts with why I like living in a forest. So, what's a forest? Lots of trees, and it's wild where I live. So? Living trees are full of elctrolytes, which are conductors, and grounded through their roots. This must be makiing a shield against various forms of radiated energy. For those who don't live in a forest and do have a house, how about planting ivy (maybe on a frame so it doesn't mess with the walls)? Should do some good. In an apartment, I've seen a whole wall of some kind of ivy-like climbing plant fed by hydroponic, and the usual grow lights. The hydroponic should be grounded to a power ground. Should do the same thing. Does anyone know of experience with this? William [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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