Have you got an analogue [of any sort] for this White noise Hum ,Vic?
As if we don't have enough to do with the basic!  ;~/
It may be part of the microwave hearing spectrum.

On Jan 1, 1:26 pm, Vic <[email protected]> wrote:
> ELF – By its very insinuative association it sounds mischievous huh?
>
> FYI - I contacted the guy “gathering” information for the Irish ELF
> inquiry – He’s stuck in WiFi, as in WiMAX mode – Got nothing to do
> with our problem although it is a sometimes component of the power
> line emissions. So there’s a hung decision after a useless 12 months
> of deliberation. Shame that – I am trying to help him see the ELF
> light at the end of the tunnel.
>
> Kids get up to mischief: Tech savvy teens – Apparently their latest
> trick is to play a 17Hz artificially generated signal through their
> subwoofer and scare the crap out of their friends/family. Gut pain too
> according to reports although nobody can hear it. 17Hz sub-subharmonic
> hybrid signal is in the DSSF3 scans – “They” are toying with the
> population’s emotional state big time.
>
> AC sine wave wavelength and amplitude are (and actually ARE) very
> easily distorted – If you look at the IACF scan in DSSF3 it shows the
> relative shape of the CURRENT (Amps) waveform. Tau_e shows the spikes.
> If you correlate this to the FFT Cross Spectrum inter/sub/sub-sub/
> harmonics in Sound Analyser’s Spectrum scan it gets pretty messy in
> the sub ~45Hz “Hum” zone. Which you can see in the latter.
>
> White Noise: Apart from being the name of the “next big thing coming
> your way” – Comms companies using the old analog bands for cell phone-
> like carrier waves – there is a white noise component to this “Hum”.
> Very close to the 50Hz “real”, all-pervasive white noise and very
> distinguishable in this “Hum” thing.
>
> On Jan 1, 5:15 am, Trev <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > Interesting info Vic.
> > At the long wavelengths quoted- they may be extreme ELF, but at the
> > gross energy levels, quite capable of triggering secondary effects.
> > Very little reported research seems to be done at these ELF freqs, not
> > least due to the background noise[ Schumann resonance etc] and
> > obscuration from those with an interest in suppressing any info on
> > same!
>
> > On Jan 1, 12:21 am, Vic <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > Contrary to popular belief electron flow that we refer to as
> > > electricity travels (theoretically at the speed of light in a vacuum -
> > > 330,000 miles/second) on the outside of the conductor that is carrying
> > > them/it. In the case of multi-core cables, as with power transmission
> > > lines, the electron flow also follows the helical winding of the cores
> > > making up the cable. Point of interest here, at 60Hz the associated
> > > elctrical AC sine wave is 5500 miles long, at 50Hz 6600. So in a
> > > hundred miles of transmission line there is just 0.02 of the AC sine
> > > wave at any given time. No point here - Just a statement :P)
>
> > > When it gets cold, as in freezing, the electrons travel on top of the
> > > ice on the cable - This makes attenuation (leaving the power line and
> > > scattering) far more likely as the subatomic "bond" - the weak nuclear
> > > force - is already partially broken. FYI - Copper has 29 all electron
> > > subatomic particles. 28 are tightly packed around the nucleus, only
> > > one is in a high "S-type" valence band orbit. This allows for it to be
> > > easily removed, as in elctron flow aka electricity..
>
> > > OK - That's it for this year - Happy 2012. Let's make this the year of
> > > "The Hum Stoppers" instead of the "Hum Hearers"!
>
> > > On Dec 31, 6:48 pm, Trev <[email protected]> wrote:- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Hum 
Sufferers" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/hum-sufferers?hl=en.

Reply via email to