Thanks for the references. I originally got my Trifield to measure magnetic field gauss, and I have repurposed it for RF (it being 3-in-1 and all). I was just wondering if my Trifield was telling me that I'm in danger.
Assume for a moment that I don't want to spend months of research to become an EMF subject matter expert. Ideally, there'…
Thanks for the references. I originally got my Trifield to measure magnetic field gauss, and I have repurposed it for RF (it being 3-in-1 and all). I was just wondering if my Trifield was telling me that I'm in danger.
Assume for a moment that I don't want to spend months of research to become an EMF subject matter expert. Ideally, there's a table somewhere that shows "the mice died after N mw/m^2 over a 3 period" so I can assess whether or not this is an issue for me.
Personally, I think it is in everyone's interest to really dig into this subject because we will be exposed to it all for the rest of our lives, and once you learn the subject, you can make informed decisions about things. And it is biologically hurting us whether we feel it or not. Youtube videos are great because they spoon-feed you info in a very short amount of time.
That being said, my RF meter says 0-10 mW/m2 is slight, 11-100 is moderate, above 100 is high and somewhere at least below 800 it registered extreme. The gaussmeter I own is from Less EMF and it is this one https://lessemf.com/product/switchable-31-axis-gaussmeter/. Oram Miller told me electric fields have more to do with sleep as opposed to magnetic fields, which are more dangerous. I used my RF meter to discover that my TV, even though everything in our house is hardwired, was still putting out Bluetooth I didn't know about, which was making me dizzy. It also revealed that my hardwired satellite receiver box near the TV was putting out wifi to the nearby tower at night, which could not be turned off and that caused dizziness, too. Both those signals were in the extreme, like tens of thousands.
Thanks for the references. I originally got my Trifield to measure magnetic field gauss, and I have repurposed it for RF (it being 3-in-1 and all). I was just wondering if my Trifield was telling me that I'm in danger.
Assume for a moment that I don't want to spend months of research to become an EMF subject matter expert. Ideally, there's a table somewhere that shows "the mice died after N mw/m^2 over a 3 period" so I can assess whether or not this is an issue for me.
Personally, I think it is in everyone's interest to really dig into this subject because we will be exposed to it all for the rest of our lives, and once you learn the subject, you can make informed decisions about things. And it is biologically hurting us whether we feel it or not. Youtube videos are great because they spoon-feed you info in a very short amount of time.
That being said, my RF meter says 0-10 mW/m2 is slight, 11-100 is moderate, above 100 is high and somewhere at least below 800 it registered extreme. The gaussmeter I own is from Less EMF and it is this one https://lessemf.com/product/switchable-31-axis-gaussmeter/. Oram Miller told me electric fields have more to do with sleep as opposed to magnetic fields, which are more dangerous. I used my RF meter to discover that my TV, even though everything in our house is hardwired, was still putting out Bluetooth I didn't know about, which was making me dizzy. It also revealed that my hardwired satellite receiver box near the TV was putting out wifi to the nearby tower at night, which could not be turned off and that caused dizziness, too. Both those signals were in the extreme, like tens of thousands.