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On Thu, 21 May 2009 19:29:24 -0700, "Al Lorona"
wrote: Jeff Liebermann wrote: Was not a burning or anything, it made you feel real nervous and uneasy. Pretty weird.. :/ Probably if I hadn't had the following experience, I would think you were kinda loony, Jeff. But I know exactly what you describe. Please watch the attributions. I didn't write that quote. Several times in my 4th semester in college a good friend and myself would ditch English class and drive up to Mt. Wilson, the mountain peak above Los Angeles where almost all of its radio and TV antenna installations are. I spent quite a bit of time up at Mt Wilson in the late 1960's. I certainly had RF effects, but the causes were obvious. My teeth would hurt. What was happening was the metal in the fillings was getting slightly warm. The lousy job the original dentist did left a gap under the filling, which was full of air, bacteria, crud, whatever. Heat up the fillings, and the air tries to expand. If it hits the nerve, my teeth would hurt. This went on for several years until I had some removed and replaced with the unleaded variety. I also have a small stainless plate where my skull was fractured while I was trying to play gang member (at age 14). I eventually outgrew the plate and had it replaced with a plastic and fake bone version. The RF induced pains magically went away. There have to be several megawatts of VHF and UHF ERP up there. Most of it goes over your head as the antenna patterns are towards the horizon, not under the towers. Even so, there's still quite a bit floating around. I didn't worry much about the RF. It was the falling blocks of ice when the TV station xmitter baby sitter didn't bother turning on the de-icer until the VSWR climbed. By then, there was quite a bit of ice on the antennas. Nothing like big ice blocks falling from 500ft to ruin my evening. Most went right threw the corregated steel roof on the commercial radio buildings that sat under the towers. The blocks didn't do much damage to the radios, which were in racks and boxes. However, it did a great job of peeling off all the coax cables and control wires. Each time we made the trek in his Pinto station wagon, almost as soon as we rounded the final bend at the top, I would start to feel nauseous. Probably the fumes from the Pinto. In college, I worked part time for a local Ford dealer fixing electrical systems in mostly Pintos and Mavericks. I'd say you were lucky to have made it up the hill. I couldn't stay up there for more than a few minutes, and for several hours afterward I would have what I came to call an 'RF headache'-- a dull, debilitating haze that affected my focus and appetite. I don't know how anyone who has to work up there does it, having to live in that environment. Probably different people have different sensitivity levels. I spent about 8 days up there helping with a messy install. I never felt anything exept some altitude sickness (at 5700ft) which affected my sleep. However, that was in the 1960's, where there were far fewer xmitters on Mt Wilson. These days, you could probably heat your lunch by simply waving it in the air. Al W6LX |
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