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![]() "Chuck Harris" wrote in message ... The EMP problem is very well studied, and very classified. You won't find much detailed information. The US has spent billions of dollars studying it. The amount of money spent should act as an indicator of the danger of the effect. EMP is far worse than lightning! This is because the risetime of EMP is in the sub pico second region. Even a dead short circuit looks like an inductor at these frequencies. Now, on the bright side, all of the IC manufacturers have been hardening their ICs for electro static and EMP effects for at least the last 20 years. They know the score, and don't want their stuff fizzling with EMP. EMP hardened pads cost them nothing to include. As to tube gear surviving EMP, every commercial tube rig made in the '60s and 70s had some solidstate in it. The HW101 had a solid state LTO, the HW100 was tube, with a varactor to shift the vFO for usb/lsb. Same with the SB100/101. SB102 had a ss LTO. Diodes were used here and there to aid in T/R switching.... If spamsink is really interested in having a rig that will survive EMP he should look at some of the US military solid state gear. It is all hardened. Or, on a cheaper note, put an ICOM in a copper can. -Chuck, WA3UQV One of the best RF shielded structures is available for a couple of dollars at your local hardware store. Just buy a couple of 1 gallon steel paint cans. Drop in your survival radio and a battery, and tap the top back on. (A true survivalist would also can a good revolver and a couple of boxes of ammo; not for NEMP protection, just for convenience.) The mechanical wiping interference fit of the lid makes for an excellent RF shield. Watch out for some cans with an internal plastic film; either get the metal plated cans, or buff off the plastic film from the can and lid seal faces. The scenario for NEMP is 50,000 volts per meter electric field strength at the Earth's surface. If you want to protect your equipment from this threat, then you have to treat every interface to your rig. That means shielding the case and filtering / limiting the power cable, any computer I/O lines, any external meters or speakers, and the antenna cable. The easiest way to do all this is to put the rig, plus speakers and meters, into a very conductive box (Faraday cage). Use a powerline filter with transient limiters to bring power into the box. Use a fast-acting limiter (designed with NEMP in mind) on the coax. Provide ventilation through honeycomb or multiple small diameter holes. By now, you may have noticed that although the rig is protected, you have created a very difficult to use station. OK, just make your shielded box bigger, and climb inside. A decent home-made shielded box should easily give you 80 dB or so of shielding effectiveness, which is a 10,000x reduction, thus exposing the rig to only 5 V/M of the 50,000 V/M NEMP. Remember that you are only protected when the access door is properly closed. It won't do any good if you do everything else correct, but leave the door hanging open an inch. Finally, a note about military gear. Not all mil equipment is procured to the same performance level. Since shielding and other protection adds weight, bulk and cost, some mil equipment is built tougher than other mil equipment. An RF transponder used in a submarine has less need for NEMP hardening (the sub hull and the water provide a lot of shielding) than a composite airframe missile. OTOH, what are the odds of a missile being in-flight during a nuclear event? (Harden the launcher box, not the vehicle itself.) So, although any mil equipment is more likely to survive an NEMP than civilian stuff, some mil stuff is a lot better than other mil stuff. If you are buying surplus mil gear, consider the original mission scenario and the threats to that mission. Ed WB6WSN |
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