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Quote from: CliveGnoticeably night timeIf you live in a residential area, then the peak traffic on the cell station will be about 6pm to 10pm.- More traffic = higher radiation.- Lower traffic = lower radiationBefore 6pm, people tend to be outside or at work. After 10pm, people tend to go to sleep.So what do you mean by "night time"?
noticeably night time
If people told you not to do something because they had linked it causally to something else, but had only rumors to back them up, you would ignore them, I suppose. When 300 Spanish got sicked by some brand of olive oil, you would have ignored them and put it on your salad.
They never "proved" it was a particular brand because the problem was over before they could take samples.
You found one of the fake news science tests. Do you believe every study you ever came read? How do you tell the difference between studies that contradict one another?
The peak power takes place when there are shorted ... connections.
When connected, the cell phones and the tower talk to each other to reduce their power.
The peak power takes place when there are ... fewer connections.
This is in agreement with my meter.
So what do you mean by "night time"?
Quote from: CliveGThe peak power takes place when there are shorted ... connections. What is a "shorted" connection?"Shorted" normally means a "short circuit", which only happens in wires; however, here we are talking about wireless mobile.QuoteWhen connected, the cell phones and the tower talk to each other to reduce their power.This is correct. They only use enough power to overcome the attenuation and interference in the wireless path.If they used more than the minimum necessary power, they would:- Shorten battery life in the cellphone, with no benefit- Consume more power in the base station, increasing costs for the operator (and ultimately, the consumer), with no benefit- Increase interference to more distant users, who would, in turn, have to increase their transmit power, etc...QuoteThe peak power takes place when there are ... fewer connections. I don't understand the basis of this claim.- For all the above reasons, you don't want to use more than the minimum necessary power.- So why would they intentionally waste power when there are few users to benefit from it?Perhaps you are confusing two other actions:- Searching for new devices that have just been turned on inside the cell coverage area. But this search happens all the time.- A cell handover from an adjacent cell. By definition, these users are on the edge of the cell, with higher attenuation, and need more power. But at nighttime (after 10pm), there are fewer people using the network, and fewer cell handovers.Quote This is in agreement with my meter.How does your meter count the number of active users?How does your meter count "shorted" connections (whatever that is)?Now, answer the question:Quote from: evan_auSo what do you mean by "night time"?You need to tell us about when the symptoms were experienced at night.And tell us about how the radiated power varied during the night.
At night (10 pm to 5 am), the tower is "roaming" to find connections and let cell devices know it is there. It does this at high power.
The pulsations are also worse because the transmissions may not be at full "capacity" where each time slot is operational.
The obvious experiment will be for Clive to record his symptoms without having access to any EM field data, and for a third party to correlate them with independently recorded field data.It is unreasonable to expect 100% correlation with any alleged causative parameter but fairly easy to establish a probability of causation. Some years ago a colleague was called as expert witness in a claim that a "health-giving laser" did not work. The manufacturer asserted that he could detect the beneficial effect on his skin when blindfolded. My chum noted that the machine emitted a buzz when the laser was active so, having established a positive correlation between "laser on" and "I can feel it", he first placed a bible (always available in a court of law) between the source and the skin, then pointed the laser away from the skin. Still 100% correlation. Costs awarded to the customer.
Re: Does mobile phone tower radiation pose health problems?« Reply #201 on: 08/09/2019 13:24:50 »Quote from: CliveG on 08/09/2019 10:51:31 If people told you not to do something because they had linked it causally to something else, but had only rumors to back them up, you would ignore them, I suppose. When 300 Spanish got sicked by some brand of olive oil, you would have ignored them and put it on your salad. You have mistaken 2 for 300.also, as I have pointed out, whenever anyone has actually done real science on this, it turns out not to be real.Also the wiki page on the incident says this"Once the origin of the syndrome was realised, public health officials organized an exchange programme, whereby those who had bought the oil could exchange it for pure olive oil, "which rather undermines this bit of your "story".Quote from: CliveG on 08/09/2019 10:51:31 They never "proved" it was a particular brand because the problem was over before they could take samples. doesn't it?and, since they point out that "It was then imported as cheap industrial oil by the company RAPSA at San Sebastián, handled by RAELCA, and illegally refined by ITH in Seville " it's clear that they do know what brand it is.
BMJ is generally credible but not entirely immune from confirmation bias (referees generally approve papers that support their prejudices) prefiltering (it takes a brave or at least selfemployed scientist to proffer a paper that disproves his sponsor's working hypothesis, or demonstrates "no effect" from an RCT) and preselection (I wouldn't offer an article supporting MMR vaccination to a journal like What Doctors Don't Tell You). The best hoaxes and bogus results are those that made the lead article in Nature. Ultimately it's a case of caveat lector.
QuoteAt night (10 pm to 5 am), the tower is "roaming" to find connections and let cell devices know it is there. It does this at high power.I agree, it must scan around to locate devices that have just been turned on.But it does this just as often during the day. And only a fraction of these scans will be aimed in your direction - most of the cell service area will require beaming the signal above your house = less exposure for you.Quote The pulsations are also worse because the transmissions may not be at full "capacity" where each time slot is operational.I agree that one way to save power at low traffic times is to combine as much traffic as possible onto a few timeslots, leaving the transmitter idle in the "vacant" timeslots.But the peak power is just as high as during the day.- The average power is just lower at night- So you are saying that less exposure causes more symptoms?That does not sound like much of a correlation.Does your meter continually log power to a file, or is it manual, and you look at it when you are woken by the symptoms?
I think the BMJ panders to big corporates with regard to "fake news".
It has already been verified by studies that less radiation can cause problems if the radiation has a certain pulsing characteristic.
Quote from: CliveG on 10/09/2019 11:56:53It has already been verified by studies that less radiation can cause problems if the radiation has a certain pulsing characteristic. No. All you have shown is that peak intensities cause transient phenomena. Beware of loose adjectives in science. Remember that the average depth of the Thames is only 3 ft, but many statisticians have drowned trying to walk across it.
I doubt that. BMJ published the first reports linking smoking with lung cancer
Are you guys guilty of doubling down a lot?
You are correct that I am wrong that 300 got sick. The fact is that 300 died. 20,000 got sick
You have mistaken 2 for 300.
The obvious experiment will be for Clive to record his symptoms without having access to any EM field data, and for a third party to correlate them with independently recorded field data.
We discount evidence when it doesn’t square up with our goals while we embrace information that confirms our biases. Sometimes hearing we’re wrong makes us double down. And so on and so forth.
The night time symptoms happen first and then are confirmed with the meter.Note - in all cases the meter confirms the symptoms. Why do I need 24 hour data collection