Salvatorejrc
Member
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2020
- Messages
- 156
I'm surprised no one has asked this yet, so I guess I am the first. Does anyone know if scanners produce harmful radiation if you're around them a lot?
I'm surprised no one has asked this yet, so I guess I am the first. Does anyone know if scanners produce harmful radiation if you're around them a lot?
So what makes a cell phone different in that it does produce harmful radiationNo harmful radiation, perfectly safe.
Cell phones are transmitters.So what makes a cell phone different in that it does produce harmful radiation
So what makes a cell phone different in that it does produce harmful radiation
So what makes a cell phone different in that it does produce harmful radiation
There is no proof nor scientific plausible science that a cell phones does--just precautions, quackery, and phony products that are supposed to protect you and help lighten your pocket book.
I take it you work for a telecommunications company?There are studies that high levels of RF radiation for long enough durations can cause medical issues.
But, cell phones are measured in hundreds of milliwatts, and modern cell phones do not transmit 100% of the time, it's pulsed.
FCC has some very specific rules about exposure, time limits, etc.
Yeah, there is a LOT of quackery about the risks from cell phones and cellular base stations. A whole lot of bad information, science, and outright lies. I've had to deal with this at work, and the people that believe the lies will not listen to any science at all.
I take it you work for a telecommunications company?
How do you get into that field of work? Do you just have to have the knowledge or is there some type of certificationNo. I work in the telecommunication field. I have to get involved in a lot of different projects and aspects of the field. We have a large cellular distributed antenna system at work for all the major carriers. We had to do radiation studies since we were placing systems on top of buildings and near residential buildings. We have radiation guys at work that know the science behind it, have the tools to measure it. We did our own studies and research since it was a carrier agnostic system. We did presentations to the public on the system. We had a few real nut jobs show up.
How do you get into that field of work? Do you just have to have the knowledge or is there some type of certification
I'm surprised no one has asked this yet, so I guess I am the first. Does anyone know if scanners produce harmful radiation if you're around them a lot?