I am wondering if anyone notices fewer symptoms in areas where power lines are buried? I noticed my first problems when we moved to Oregon, but that also coincided with my purchase of a cell phone and additional face time with a computer. We have lived in the same .25 mile for 7 years and all of the lines are buried. Who do I call to see what is buried and where? Who do I call to locate the cell towers? Shawn |
Finding the underground lines is easy. Get a good Gauss meter and
anything over 5 mG usually means their is a line under the ground. Don't live on a corner. Usually two converging lines will create a magnetic field that covers the entire house in 1-2 mG reading. As far as cell phone base stations and repeaters, I have tried to call people about their location (Sprint, FCC) and nobody will touch that one. "It's a local issue." I found that going to my local Board of Elections records (and looking at past meeting minutes and files) that gave me the global tracking numbers and some addresses where companies and developers rent space on property. There are websites of cell phone base station developers that have the GPS numbers of the sites. I don't have a GPS so that is meaningless. If anybody has a website that can decipher the GPS numbers and maps them, please tell me. As far as locating the cell phone base stations arrays, good luck. They may be disguising them as trees, hiding them in steeples, sings, inside poles, you name it. Use an RF meter and get the best lowest reading. Even that won't guarantee that you won't end up with a mast built across the street. There is much info about local Zoning and the fight with Federal or public lands and jurisdiction law. We need to change the FCC minimum allowable radiation and change the 1996 Telecommunications Act that says we can't sue for health reasons. I can go on and on. Good luck. Andrew On Oct 25, 2004, at 1:42 PM, nyapshawn wrote: > > > I am wondering if anyone notices fewer symptoms in areas where power > lines are buried? I noticed my first problems when we moved to > Oregon, but that also coincided with my purchase of a cell phone and > additional face time with a computer. We have lived in the same .25 > mile for 7 years and all of the lines are buried. Who do I call to > see what is buried and where? Who do I call to locate the cell towers? > > Shawn > > > > > > > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > > > > > |
Correction not "Board of Elections" but "Board of Adjustment".
I have voting on my mind. andrew On Oct 25, 2004, at 2:32 PM, Andrew McAfee wrote: > > Finding the underground lines is easy. Get a good Gauss meter and > anything over 5 mG usually means their is a line under the ground. > Don't live on a corner. Usually two converging lines will create a > magnetic field that covers the entire house in 1-2 mG reading. > > As far as cell phone base stations and repeaters, I have tried to call > people about their location (Sprint, FCC) and nobody will touch that > one. "It's a local issue." > I found that going to my local Board of Elections records (and > looking > at past meeting minutes and files) that gave me the global tracking > numbers and some addresses where companies and developers rent space on > property. > There are websites of cell phone base station developers that have the > GPS numbers of the sites. I don't have a GPS so that is meaningless. > If anybody has a website that can decipher the GPS numbers and maps > them, please tell me. > > As far as locating the cell phone base stations arrays, good luck. They > may be disguising them as trees, hiding them in steeples, sings, inside > poles, you name it. Use an RF meter and get the best lowest reading. > Even that won't guarantee that you won't end up with a mast built > across the street. > There is much info about local Zoning and the fight with Federal or > public lands and jurisdiction law. > We need to change the FCC minimum allowable radiation and change the > 1996 Telecommunications Act that says we can't sue for health reasons. > I can go on and on. > Good luck. > Andrew > > On Oct 25, 2004, at 1:42 PM, nyapshawn wrote: > >> >> >> I am wondering if anyone notices fewer symptoms in areas where power >> lines are buried? I noticed my first problems when we moved to >> Oregon, but that also coincided with my purchase of a cell phone and >> additional face time with a computer. We have lived in the same .25 >> mile for 7 years and all of the lines are buried. Who do I call to >> see what is buried and where? Who do I call to locate the cell towers? >> >> Shawn >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Yahoo! Groups Links >> >> >> >> >> >> >> > > > > > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > > > > > |
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