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Scott wrote:
AJ Lake wrote: . I'm sure that our (US) military protects for EMP, but I doubt it is by using tube equipment. Likely something more modern. Fancy Shielding? Perhaps you know the technology currently used? Nope, no idea. When I was in the Air Force working on aircraft comm radio equipment, "they" told us if a nuke went off, our radios would most likely not work. I don't think fancy shielding would work since all radios I know of have a hole in the shield where RF and EMP can enter. It used to be called the antenna port. Not sure what they call it in "modern" equipment... I did some work on simulated EMP back in the 80's (when I was wearing a different engineering hat), and we found that there's /nothing/ that will protect semiconductor equipment against it. We used very high voltage discharges (at the City University High Voltage Lab in London), and we destroyed all sorts of gear! The original plan was to examine resilience against lightning discharges, but later on the experiments were expanded to cover EMP. We found that "hollow-state" gear could withstand quite a lot of abuse and continue to work, whereas the solid-state equipment would die at the slightest provocation. This had /very/ serious ramifications for the "defence industry". I've recently found another application that's best serviced with valves ("tubes" - U.S.). A friend of mine is responsible for the maintenance of a number or airport NDB units. The ones they had were solid state, and would quite regularly get fried by static or lightning. Over the last few days we've begun the design of a valve replacement for the "hot" end of these things. It's not difficult to get a few tens of Watts at MF with valves! Bob |
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