> Mark wrote:
> This article was interesting enough that I pulled out my (largely unused)
> Stetzerizer meter. I found some of the readings last night rather
> curious, although I don't have an explanation yet. For example,
> I was getting a reading of ~500 in my den last night before I went to bed.
> So I unplugged and turned off everything in the room, and it was still
> high. However, when I looked at it the next morning, the reading
> was down to 50, even though there seemed to be no difference in what
> was turned on and plugged in.
>
> Then I turned back on the 2 computers, routers, printer, etc., and the
> reading went up to 100. At least that makes sense. But I still have
> no explanation for the high readings from last night. I'd blame it
> on my next door neighbor, except that neither of them are home...
>
>
Shivani replies:
Continuous monitoring of electrical pollution levels with a Stetzer
meter will reveal in most areas considerable changes that have nothing whatsoever
to do with what is going on at the home where the meter is taking the
reading. Anything done that creates electrical anywhere along the entire line you
are on will raise your levels. For instance, at Outpost Natural Food Coop in
Milwaukee, WI, on weekends the level is dramatically lower than it is on
weekdays. I don't recall the exact numbers, but it was something over 1000 on a
weekday, vs. maybe 150 on Saturday. The Coop is in an industrial area, where
industries are shut down on the weekends.
I happened to be remediating a bakery with one particularly problematic
circuit when all of a sudden the readings plummeted. I looked at the clock.
3 pm. Local factory shifts had just ended for the day.
We are all "downstream" from a lot more folks than our next door
neighbors!
Regards,
Shivani
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