I have a body voltage meter, and in certain areas of my house it is really
high, like over 8 volts. Normally it is under 2. Is there anything I can do about it short of ripping out all the walls and the wires and rewiring it? Thanks. -- Paul Coffman [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
Hello Paul,
why are you so fixed on the wiring? There are so many other sources of elektrosmog, that can raise your body voltage. (Even your ground where you connect your multimeter, may not be good. I often find grounds, which are not the required 0 Ohm, and also I find them changing values all the time.) 1. Static electrical fields 2. Alternating electrical fields 3. Static magnetic fields 4. Alternating magnetic fields 5. Electromagnetic waves About point 5, deo not think, that only the wireless apparatus are the main source. There are a great number of other sources, in the range of 5 - 150 kHz. Neighbours under and above you may have for instance fluorescent lighting. Those may give magnetic fields, and ca. 30 kHz signals. Or halogen lamps may raise 30 kHz signals in your mains electricity. Or other electrical apparatus. There are many dangers lurking at you. Although the Trifield is nice, it is just not good enough. Greetings, Charles Claessens member Verband Baubiologie www.milieuziektes.nl www.milieuziektes.be www.hetbitje.nl checked by Bitdefender ----- Original Message ----- From: "Paul Coffman" <[hidden email]> To: <[hidden email]> Sent: Monday, September 24, 2007 01:41 Subject: [eSens] high Electric fields in house >I have a body voltage meter, and in certain areas of my house it is really > high, like over 8 volts. Normally it is under 2. Is there anything I can > do about it short of ripping out all the walls and the wires and rewiring > it? Thanks. > > -- > Paul Coffman > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > > |
In reply to this post by Paul Coffman
What ground are you measuring relative to?
If different parts of the house are grounded to different ground rods, say, and one of them is near something that puts a lot of current into the ground, that would explain it. Again voltage does not matter, it's the gradient in voltage that matters. I.e., places where the voltage changes rapidly from one place to the next. 8 volts sounds like a lot. Emil's advice is good... Bill On 9/23/07, Paul Coffman <[hidden email]> wrote: > > I have a body voltage meter, and in certain areas of my house it is > really > high, like over 8 volts. Normally it is under 2. Is there anything I can > do about it short of ripping out all the walls and the wires and rewiring > it? Thanks. > > -- > Paul Coffman > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by Paul Coffman
Start by trying to identify the offending source(s).
First turn off all power in the house. Does that make a difference? The turn on only 1 cicuit at a time, does that make a difference? The solution may involve only a limited number of circuits, or as Charles points out, could have nothing to do with circuits. Diagnose first! Emil >I have a body voltage meter, and in certain areas of my house it is really > high, like over 8 volts. Normally it is under 2. Is there anything I can > do about it short of ripping out all the walls and the wires and rewiring > it? Thanks. > > -- > Paul Coffman |
Free forum by Nabble | Edit this page |