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[–] 3 pts

This looks kooky to me. I'm on board with things like wifi, cell, and other communications frequencies having unintended health consequences. Yes, "Smart meters" would be part of that but they're only different in that they're much lower power and communicate less frequently, only sending as a response to incoming requests for example. Compare this to your phone or router for example

[–] 0 pt

Cellphones transmit with much greater power than Wi-Fi. They're the ones to worry about.

[–] 1 pt

If smart meters do this, then all must right? Cellphones, Wifi, Radio, Radar?

I will say at the base of cell towers they have radiation warning signs.

[–] 3 pts

That's because the radiation, or RF Energy, is quite high at the tower sectors. You can get some serious burns and/or death from being in the direct path of a transmitter. It would be like sticking your hand in a microwave oven and turning it on. You're going to get burnt, but 50 feet from the oven cavity there's not going to be much that can hurt you. (Still, don't try that at home.)

The interesting thing about "smart" meters is this technology isn't new. It wasn't uncommon to see water heaters fitted with a shutdown device that would turn off the unit when power demand was high. In return, you'd get a discount on your electric bill or some sort of "We'll replace the tank at our expense every 10 years" or so type deal. They operated on this same low-speed data over powerline system that smart meters use.

I remember that being on my grandmother's water tank since the early 80s, if not before.

[–] 1 pt

Most people don't understand that RF energy is still electricity. A broadcast antenna putting out 50,000 Watts of power is the equivalent of having 50,000 Watts of electricity running through it. The frequency only really changes how the electrons move through the conductor. The higher the frequency, the more the Skin Effect happens. The Skin Effect is where electrons start moving towards the outside "skin" of the wire as the frequency goes up.

DC electricity would travel throughout the entire cross-section of the wire because there is no Skin Effect. A 800 MHz frequency would move away from the inner core of the wire and concentrate near the outside surface of the wire. Increase the frequency to many gigahertz and the power is now almost entirely riding on the surface of the wire. Regardless of where the electron flow is happening, there are still a shitload of electrons moving. You will still be in great danger of a 25 GHz signal at 50,000 Watts just as you would with a 50,000 Watt DC current flowing through the conductor. It's going to hurt or kill you either way.

The Skin Effect is also the reason why higher frequencies have low penetration through solid objects. The electrons want to ride on the skin of the object at higher frequencies just as they did in the antenna. The frequencies used by 5G cellular radio (600 MHz - 95 GHz) would have varying depths of penetration at the various frequencies of operation. The idiots out there are afraid of the GHz frequencies that would barely penetrate the skin but don't seem to fear the low frequencies that have been used for decades for analog TV broadcast at up to 150 Kilowatts. Funny, right?

The general public is also unaware that 5G frequencies have been in use for more than a decade with a wireless technology called WiMAX used for wireless internet and cellular links in most areas around the US. WiMAX can go up to 105 GHz and with much higher power output than 5G cellular because it was meant to cover large areas (up to 40 miles radius) and do it omnidirectionally. Yeah, let's be afraid of 5G and smart meters, but pay no mind the fact that WiMAX has been in use for 10+ years and no one even noticed any effects from it.

One last thing- radiation means simply things emanate from a central point, as in radius from the center point of a circle. Tree branches radiate from the trunk. bicycle spokes radiate from the hub of the wheel. Radiation is a word most people just don't understand and falsely think electromagnetic radiation is harmful. It can be, but only above the frequency levels where ionization occurs (in the deep ultraviolet part of the electromagnetic spectrum and up). The sun radiates massive amounts of energy, both ionizing and non-ionizing, but these same fearful retards don't mind the sun. And let's not forget how much harmful energy the whole universe puts out....

[–] 2 pts (edited )

Yes. W-band shit. Superfun to work with, it's all waveguide at that point.

5G protocol is available on multiple frequencies, down to 600MHz, but is widely used on the higher bands.

[–] 1 pt

Main limit is the spreading of the energy. 50kW at the source, but how much would a square foot capture a mile away?

[–] 0 pt

All effects should be studied well wimax and 5g. All these frequencies we are increasingly exposed to should be well studied. We are not doing due diligence. it is law that cell phone companies cannot be sued for damages. Odd they would lobby for that protection...

Non-ionizing does not automatically equal safe.

[–] 0 pt

You can get some serious burns and/or death from being in the direct path of a transmitter. It would be like sticking your hand in a microwave oven and turning it on.

  1. Microwaves only burn because they are a specific frequency that is absorbed by water. 2.4 GHz, specifically. If it were the same power but a different frequency it would have no effect on you whatsoever. Quantum mechanics, how does it work?

  2. Microwave ovens operate at 1,500W, or about 2,000 times more powerful than any smart meter is sending signals.

[–] 0 pt

Yes. It's a transmitter. Any sufficiently high power RF energy will cause burns, especially if you're standing in the path of it. Consumer microwaves usually top out at around 1.1KW, with most being lower. Commercial ovens are usually around 1.5KW. If you've got a 2KW oven, that's an unusual bird.

The low-speed data over powerline would have to be injected directly into your body for years to cause any damage, aka it isn't going to.

[–] 0 pt

Don't forget the Sun - the biggest, most powerful emitter of electromagnetic radiation on the Earth by a factor of at least 100.

There's a huge profit to make from sick people. Obviously they have to protect their profits by hiding the effects of microwave radiation.

All one needs to do is research the Moscow signal.

https://adst.org/2013/09/microwaving-embassy-moscow-another-perspective/

[–] 0 pt

You know WiFi and Bluetooth are microwave radiation, right?