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#1
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Hi,
I haven't find a better ham newsgroup for this question... so sorry if it is s bit off subject. I read somewhere that a GSM 900 MHz produced at electromagentic field of 50V/m (!!) placed at the ear, a 900/1800 Mhe up to 70V/m and a microwave oven working at 2450 Mhz (850W) up to 80 V/m on top the cabinet. These values are falses ! If we convert these data in watts, we see that the power radiated is greater that the emitter power. Hi !! More than 100 GSM were recently tested in Belgium by labs and controlled by the P&T (IBPT) and confirm that the measured fields, at one or two exceptions, are BELOW 1V/m. We are thus well below the energy released by any ham device. Problem I don't know if the microwave oven value is correct. Can someone know its EM field expressed in V/m ? Thanks in advance Thierry, ON4SKY http://www.astrosurf.com/lombry |
#2
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The NTIA measured a series of microwave ovens as part of interference
testing for 802.11. Here's a link to the main page http://www.its.bldrdoc.gov/pub/ntia-rpt/94-303-1/ And a link to the measurement results http://www.its.bldrdoc.gov/pub/ntia-...03-1/chap5.pdf Summary of the summary: Worst-case emissions were near 2450 MHz. Ovens averaged about +113 dBuV/m, the worst case one was about +128 dBuV/m measured at 3 meters. dBuV/m is dB relative to a microvolt per meter. Hopefully I'm not hosed up here, I think +120 dBuV/m is the same as 1 v/m. That would make these ovens E-fields about -7 dBv/m to +8 dBv/m, or about 0.45 v/m (mean) up to about 2.5 v/m worst case). -- Tom "Thierry" - wrote in message ... Hi, I haven't find a better ham newsgroup for this question... so sorry if it is s bit off subject. I read somewhere that a GSM 900 MHz produced at electromagentic field of 50V/m (!!) placed at the ear, a 900/1800 Mhe up to 70V/m and a microwave oven working at 2450 Mhz (850W) up to 80 V/m on top the cabinet. These values are falses ! If we convert these data in watts, we see that the power radiated is greater that the emitter power. Hi !! More than 100 GSM were recently tested in Belgium by labs and controlled by the P&T (IBPT) and confirm that the measured fields, at one or two exceptions, are BELOW 1V/m. We are thus well below the energy released by any ham device. Problem I don't know if the microwave oven value is correct. Can someone know its EM field expressed in V/m ? Thanks in advance Thierry, ON4SKY http://www.astrosurf.com/lombry |
#3
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![]() "Buba Zebop" wrote in message ... That is outside the oven, Inside it's about 10,000 V/m or so? I know a neon bulb glows with 0.01 leads at a breakdown voltage of 90 volts and really glows hot. Try an ordinary 120 V bulb or a small florescent. Be sure they are expendable!. 73, -- Steve N, K,9;d, c. i My email has no u's. |
#4
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![]() "Thierry" - wrote in message ... Hi, I haven't find a better ham newsgroup for this question... so sorry if it is s bit off subject. I read somewhere that a GSM 900 MHz produced at electromagentic field of 50V/m (!!) placed at the ear, a 900/1800 Mhe up to 70V/m and a microwave oven working at 2450 Mhz (850W) up to 80 V/m on top the cabinet. These values are falses ! If we convert these data in watts, Ummmm... What's the conversion you are using...? I also get -120 dB V = 0 dB uV -- Steve N, K,9;d, c. i My email has no u's. we see that the power radiated is greater that the emitter power. Hi !! More than 100 GSM were recently tested in Belgium by labs and controlled by the P&T (IBPT) and confirm that the measured fields, at one or two exceptions, are BELOW 1V/m. We are thus well below the energy released by any ham device. Problem I don't know if the microwave oven value is correct. Can someone know its EM field expressed in V/m ? Thanks in advance Thierry, ON4SKY http://www.astrosurf.com/lombry |
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