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MAKING FARADAY CAGES

The reality of needing to protect all electronic
equipment against EMP from a nuclear explosion over our
shores is becoming imminent. We now live in perilous
times. The world is a becoming dangerous place, with
China now threatening Taiwan with annihilation from
hundreds of neutron bombs. Russia is modernizing their
military infrastructure with an emphasis on first strike
capability, they have an strategic alliance with China,
and Putin is exporting "special nuclear materials" to
Iran, Syria and Egypt. President Clinton renounced
"launch on attack" in favor of absorbing a first strike
without retaliation, while President Bush wants "first
strike" authority to attack anywhere with nukes without
warning, and it is easy to see that our enemies are
virtually being invited to hit us with nukes! Iran has
plans to do just that!
Nuke Over U. S. Could Unleash Electromagnetic (EMP)
Tsunami
The information to follow on building "Faraday cages" is
timely indeed. A single atmospheric nuclear detonation
releases enough electromagnetic pulse (EMP) to equal
100,000 volts per meter (V/m). A single detonation 200 to
400 miles over the center of the continental United
States would fry every unprotected computer chip from
coast to coast, and from the middle of Canada to the
middle of Mexico. And we are now into Solar Cycle 23,
with solar flares common and expected to continue until
the first of next year. CME's are capable of extreme
damage to modern computerized equipment! Sure, we have
our windup BayGen radio's and spare lap top computers,
but unless electronic equipment is protected from an
electromagnetic pulse, they will be fried!
When Einstein and the others first refined and purified
uranium, they took time off and studied its properties.
That is when they discovered the "rays" that were
harmful, as well as the phase transformations. In the
course of their work, one of the scientists discovered
that simply covering an object with a grounded copper
mesh would stop virtually all electromagnetic radiation,
whether proton or neutron. Obviously, they had to protect
their monitoring equipment! Thus was born the "Faraday
cage."
The copper mesh, like 1 inch chicken wire, worked well in
large uses, like covering buildings, and it is still in
use today: FEMA headquarters buildings are dome-shaped
earth-bermed structures, and under the earth is a copper
mesh that extends out from the base and is secured by
grounding rods.
As an Electro Magnetic Pulse (EMP) travels to earth,
whether from a Coronal Mass Ejection (CME) or a nuclear
detonation in the atmosphere, it hits and runs along
electrical power lines as well, building up voltage and
amperage, which is what happened during the last solar
storm a dozen years ago, blowing out transformers and
leaving 6 million people in eastern Canada without power
for weeks.
To prevent that problem, if you have a hard-wired
generator, the wiring from the generator to the house
should run in conduit that is grounded. The generator
itself can have the frame grounded for added insurance,
but that ground wire MUST be insulated and run to a
different ground rod well away from the ground rod for
building and conduit! See the article on EMP and various
grounding techniques for electrical appliances, plus
grounding metal sheds for generators.
"Electric fields travel in straight lines, unless bent by
other fields. Theoretically, the bottom of a cage doesn’t
need to be closed. If someone could offer me actual EMP
test data that an open bottom is OK, I’d consider
believing it. However, if you’re in an area of high
ionization, the field could bend around. Complete
enclosure is the best technical solution.
"Faraday cage material: Electric fields are best
conducted by materials that conduct electric current the
best – silver is #1 and copper is #2. Aluminum is ~60% of
copper. Iron/steel is farther down the scale. Aluminum is
a good poor man’s foil against EMP; double wrap it to be
safe. I prefer copper foil." Ikstrums, Sept. 2, 2005
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Here is the tiny GP-4L Survival
Radio I sell at my Survival Shop and a Faraday Cage I
built for it using a plastic box travelers use as a
soap container. You can easily make a Faraday cage
for this radio as I did. |
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Here is the
tiny GP-4L Survival Radio I sell at my Survival Shop and
a Faraday Cage I built for it using a plastic box
travelers use as a soap container. You can easily make a
Faraday cage for this radio as I did.
With radio's and smaller appliances, a Faraday cage can
be built by using two cardboard boxes: one should fit
tightly inside the other, and the item to be covered
should itself fit reasonably well inside the smaller box.
That is about the most work involved--finding the right
size boxes! The outer box is then covered with aluminum
foil or Mylar, as from a cheap "space blanket." A
grounding wire is then taped to the foil. I then cover
the foil with black 6 mil plastic, taped securely in
place, to protect the foil from ripping. At the end of
the ground wire I attach a cheap small alligator clip
from Radio Shack. The item to be protected is placed
inside the inner box, which acts as insulation from the
outer box, and any EMP hitting the foil and is bled away
by the ground wire.
Some medium sized electrical equipment can also easily
fit into boxes covered with foil for EMP protection. My
laptop computer, for example, fits easily into a Faraday
box made from a box that held reams of paper: the entire
lid is removable, allowing easy access to the laptop in
its case, but is safely stored when not in use.
For larger items which cannot be boxed, such as living
room TV sets, etc, I tape a Mylar space blanket to a
piece of 6 mil black plastic sheet, using double-sticky
tape every foot or so to make sure the Mylar stays in
place (it is slippery). I leave a 2 inch edge of black
plastic showing all around the space blanket, and while
taping down the edges I put on a short lead of ground
wire. When it appears that EMP or CME's are on the way,
the blanket can be draped over the appliance, the
alligator clip attached to a small, unobtrusive ground
wire behind the cabinet, and any electromagnetic
radiation will be diverted to the ground wire. Very
cheap, simple, and once done, items can be "draped" for
protection very quickly indeed. The "EMP Blankets" roll
up for storage, but can be unrolled and thrown over a
TV/VCR setup, a computer/monitor combo, etc. As EMP comes
from altitude and is line of sight, it's OK that the
bottom isn't covered, as the bottom of the units sit on
non conductive wood.
The time to build Faraday cages or blankets is NOW, as
when they are actually needed it will be far too late.
Each box should be labeled on the ends and the top for
the exact appliance they were built for, to eliminate any
confusion when they must be protected in a hurry. Any
electrical appliances not in use should be stored in the
Faraday cage, where they will be kept clean, neat, in a
known location, and protected against any sudden EMP
surge.
NOTE: There are electrical engineers
who say that only ferrous metal boxes will protect
against EMP-enhanced weapons, while other sources say EMP
is not a problem at all. I'll take the middle ground.
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Back, left corner of metal shed is
grounded with 1/4" ground wire to a ground rod. The
wooden floor of the shed is non conductive. |
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A nuclear ground burst over 200 miles away should only
result in 50,000 volts per square centimeter (sc) on your
equipment, so the above Faraday cages should work. An air
burst within 200 miles can result in up to 100,000 volts
per sc, and that would require grounding of any Faraday
cage to a separate ground rod well away from any house
ground rods. An enhanced EMP weapon exploded at 200 miles
elevation can yield over 120,000 volts per sc within up
to 600 miles below the detonation point, and that would
definitely require insulated metal boxes which are
grounded. Remember, in the battle of warhead versus
armor, the warhead usually wins, as the warhead can be
made bigger. However, for those who build simple Faraday
cages and live in an area not likely to receive a direct
or close nuclear attack, the foil cages described should
work. Those under a direct or close nuclear attack would
probably not survive to use their electronic equipment in
any case.
Original at: http://www.endtimesreport.com/faraday_cages.html
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