View Single Post
  #59   Report Post  
Old May 24th 16, 03:25 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Wayne Wayne is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 409
Default When did ignorance overcome education, for the correct plural is, "antennae"?



"rickman" wrote in message ...

On 5/23/2016 6:52 PM, wrote:
rickman wrote:
On 5/23/2016 6:05 PM, David Ryeburn wrote:

I've kind of liked end-fed wires as antennas ever since, though now I'm
well aware of their limitations, and, with a pacemaker inside me, I no
longer dare use one. Balanced lines and center-fed doublets are a
nuisance when you go backpacking, but I do want to be able to hike back
out to the car afterwards.


What is wrong with pacemakers that they can't make one that functions
around radios and microwaves?


Lack of space for installing the faraday cage.

Pacemakers DO function around radios and microwaves.

http://www.heart.org/HEARTORG/Condit...13_Article.jsp

# Lol! Devices that have to work should be designed to work properly in
# the very low level fields that occur in every day life. It's not really
# hard. There are any number of engineers who can do that.

# Here's the list from your reference. Notice that even MP3 players with
# earbuds are a risk!

After getting a pacemaker, I chatted with the manufacturer about RF
interference, etc.
The only concern shown was for magnetic fields, and no problems were
expected if the field was removed. I was encouraged to avoid airport metal
detectors mainly because the manufacturer couldn't be sure what kind of
contraption TSA would come up with.

RF ablation didn't affect it. The circuitry seems to be solidly designed.