I previously posted about using a phono-preamp to detect electric fields.
I recently have begun using a Behringer Acoustic guitar amp for the same purpose. It is model ADI21. It has higher impedance and useful tone controls. For best results I listen with headphones through a Fiio headphone amplifier. For an antenna I am using an old set of TV "rabbit ears", about 2 ft long. Beware the connector on the end may have a filter across it, so I had to disconnect that connector. With this I can detect about half a millivolt. A shark can detect a lot less, but I think this is a relevant range for us, 0.001 volts per meter. The electric field detectors I know of go down to 10 V/m, or 1 V/m, maybe 0.1 V/m. If you have good headphones that go down to 60 Hz, you can tell the fundamental from the harmonics. In my bedroom with the kill switch off, the fundamental is not audible, but the harmonics are. Putting the "Ex-static" fabric on the bed does eliminate fields in the plane of the bed at the surface. I certainly would be interested to know if some who have tried "Faraday cages" and felt worse might still detect 60 Hz fields with this arrangement. If the cage had a floor and a ceiling and no electricity inside, then there won't be an electric field. But if just the walls are treated (as in my bedroom) there can still be electric fields. I'm considering putting a wire around the bed and connecting to the wall, or trying to put a ground rod in a strategic place. But I'm also finally ready to work on an isolated ground system (with some kind of latching safety relay) which might also solve the problem... I will add that I got some Ultrasone headphones that claim to reduce magnetic fields by 99%. They do! The bad news, my old headphones had many milligauss, and though these new ones are down below .2 milligauss at the ear, I can still listen to the music by putting a magnetic pickup a couple inches away. Many places I go I'm getting more than .2 mG, but not all over the audio spectrum and synchronized with music, which worries me in terms of tinnitus. So, a vast improvement, but if they really want to capture the electrosensitive market, they should try to do better. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
Hello Bill,
I use the EMP Spion. With its special antennas. See: http://www.minderstraling.nl/Pagina040.html With it, I can measure an electronic waxine light as well as a heat consumption meter. The special headphone gives also more details. Greetings, Charles Claessens member Verband Baubiologie www.milieuziektes.nl www.milieuziektes.be www.hetbitje.nl checked by Norton ----- Original Message ----- From: Bill Bruno To: [hidden email] Cc: [hidden email] Sent: Sunday, July 04, 2010 10:56 PM Subject: [eSens] sensitive detection of electric fields I previously posted about using a phono-preamp to detect electric fields. I recently have begun using a Behringer Acoustic guitar amp for the same purpose. It is model ADI21. It has higher impedance and useful tone controls. For best results I listen with headphones through a Fiio headphone amplifier. For an antenna I am using an old set of TV "rabbit ears", about 2 ft long. Beware the connector on the end may have a filter across it, so I had to disconnect that connector. With this I can detect about half a millivolt. A shark can detect a lot less, but I think this is a relevant range for us, 0.001 volts per meter. The electric field detectors I know of go down to 10 V/m, or 1 V/m, maybe 0.1 V/m. If you have good headphones that go down to 60 Hz, you can tell the fundamental from the harmonics. In my bedroom with the kill switch off, the fundamental is not audible, but the harmonics are. Putting the "Ex-static" fabric on the bed does eliminate fields in the plane of the bed at the surface. I certainly would be interested to know if some who have tried "Faraday cages" and felt worse might still detect 60 Hz fields with this arrangement. If the cage had a floor and a ceiling and no electricity inside, then there won't be an electric field. But if just the walls are treated (as in my bedroom) there can still be electric fields. I'm considering putting a wire around the bed and connecting to the wall, or trying to put a ground rod in a strategic place. But I'm also finally ready to work on an isolated ground system (with some kind of latching safety relay) which might also solve the problem... I will add that I got some Ultrasone headphones that claim to reduce magnetic fields by 99%. They do! The bad news, my old headphones had many milligauss, and though these new ones are down below .2 milligauss at the ear, I can still listen to the music by putting a magnetic pickup a couple inches away. Many places I go I'm getting more than .2 mG, but not all over the audio spectrum and synchronized with music, which worries me in terms of tinnitus. So, a vast improvement, but if they really want to capture the electrosensitive market, they should try to do better. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] ------------------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Links [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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