JOERG24
2009-06-02 23:11:53
- #1
I googled a few times today out of self-interest and came to the conclusion that there are hundreds of studies that come to one or the other result. Certainly not entirely independent of the respective sponsors of the study.
In the private sphere, one can probably only shield oneself against electric fields and not against magnetic ones. So much for the group of esotericists who despise high-voltage pylons and then wear magnetic bracelets.
Interestingly, if you look at the exposure experiments of the BFS, craftsmen are more at risk than people who live under a high-voltage line.
Overall, a weekly visit to a pub where people smoke seems to me to be considerably more dangerous.
However, I did not want to make a case for high voltages here. But if you want to live electromagnetically smog-free, you have to consider a whole range of other things. I would like to know how strongly an induction stove then radiates.
In the private sphere, one can probably only shield oneself against electric fields and not against magnetic ones. So much for the group of esotericists who despise high-voltage pylons and then wear magnetic bracelets.
Interestingly, if you look at the exposure experiments of the BFS, craftsmen are more at risk than people who live under a high-voltage line.
Overall, a weekly visit to a pub where people smoke seems to me to be considerably more dangerous.
However, I did not want to make a case for high voltages here. But if you want to live electromagnetically smog-free, you have to consider a whole range of other things. I would like to know how strongly an induction stove then radiates.