In a message dated 8/21/05 6:09:22 AM,
[hidden email] writes:
> Marc wrote:
> One thing I've noticed is that the readings I get on my Stetzerizer
> meter seem rather random. That is, one night my bedroom can be reading
> 50, and then another night it can be reading 300. There's nothing
> different that I can tell going on in my house, so the variability
> presumably must be from the neighbors or the utility.
>
Shivani replies:
There is nothing random about the readings. The meter is reading
exactly what is present at that time. The amount of electrical pollution
varies as the power quality varies.
I was reading a bakery one afternoon, working on determing how to place
filters to clear up a high level of electrical pollution on a particular
circuit, when suddenly the readings dropped. I looked at the clock. It was
just 3 PM, when work shifts in local factories change. The equipment that had
been creating the frequencies simlply wasn't doing it any more.
More recently I was checking a friend's apartment. It turned out that
the landlord had hired a company to come and blow in some insulation, and they
were at work at that time. Her readings were so high they exceeded the
level the meter can read. After a while, however, the workers turned off the
blower for a few minutes, and then we could see what her readings would be
like at that time of day ordinarily. When they turned the machinery backon,
the level shot back up.
The meter is designed to be left plugged in so that you can check your
EP levels at any time. You will find that they do change, and that thereare
usually patterns regarding time of day and week vs. weekend. This needs
to be remembered when installing filters, so you have enough to cover the
maximum you are going to have regularly.
Regards,
Shivani
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]