...I could be talking rubbish here though.
But seriously - if I am I'd be greatful if you could point out precisely where. Always good to learn from mistakes.yeah I would agree with that. LOL
So if there is mains interference it would happen all the time right, unless its the mains of the microwave, but surely the power cable to the micowave wouldn't carry enough current to cause sparkles or even distortion.
..normally if you can hear a buzzing sound, then you know it's carrying heavy current, and emmiting EMPs they're what i thought would cause distortion, and apparently EMPs cause cancer too.
Does it really matter if some microwaves are escaping? I thought that microwaves had a very short range and that you would want to be sitting on the oven for any leakage to affect you?Might also be an idea to get one of [broken link removed] to ensure the oven is operating safely.
And there is no causal link between EMFs and cancer.God I hope not, EMPs are more associated with nuclear explosions. I'm guessing you mean EMI or RFI here.
Can you post to some objective data that supports this linkage between (high voltage?) pylons and brain tumours please? Are you sure that you're not confusing correlation with causality? Are you sure that EMPs and overhead electrical cables/pylons go together in the first place?But there is efinitely a link of brain tumours with a family living under a pylon.
Are you absolutely sure about that?Like living for 40 years under a pylon or beside a sub-station, that would cause an insideous affect on a human.
Can you post to some objective data that supports this linkage between (high voltage?) pylons and brain tumours please? Are you sure that you're not confusing correlation with causality? Are you sure that EMPs and overhead electrical cables/pylons go together in the first place?
Are you absolutely sure about that?
Here's a slightly more skeptical take on the same report. And note the following comment in the original Telegraph report
Exactly how cancer could be caused by such exposure remains a mystery, however. The strength of the magnetic fields falls away rapidly from overhead power lines - just a few dozen yards from a pylon registers well below the natural magnetic field level of the Earth. Studies of living cells and animals exposed to such weak fields have hitherto failed to reveal any changes normally linked to cancer.
Yes - but I'm only interested in objective/scientific studies whose results have been verified.if you google it there's tonnes of results, this one basically says that they are thought to cause leukaemia.
Yes - but I'm only interested in objective/scientific studies whose results have been verified.
This is a quite facile argument. An individual's belief in such matters is neither here nor there. What matters are the facts/evidence and whether or not these support any particular hypothesis.Well you'll always get skeptics and scientists are only human in the end. So it's really up to an individual person, like The Bible, you can believe it if you want something to believe in. Or you dont.
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