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Smart Grids and Meters - One Family's Struggle with Noise Pollution  

 
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Sandra and her family’s struggle with noise pollution began back in 2006. We featured a newsletter detailing her story several years ago. Sandra recently contacted us again and asked us to feature another story with her updates and findings.

Sandra’s Update:

A number of years ago, you published a story about a noise my family and I were plagued by.  At that time, with the knowledge we had, we knew it was electrical and were focusing on a pad mounted transformer as the source.  It evoked much negative response in the comments; so much so, you had to shut it down.

We have much more physical evidence now.  In fact, it is very compelling because we have it from four different areas of science and four experts.

We have power quality, FFT analysis, acoustic 1/3 octave band, and forensic audio.  All of which, concluded the power lines are the source of the constant pulsed RF noise emissions.

I recently read your article about PLC and the noise issues surrounding this technology.  Our timeline for which the noise started was when the PLC was turned on to support the smart grid in our town.  September of 2006.  The important fact is that my family and I didn't know the meter was on our home until two years later.  By then we filed numerous complaints with the utilities and State.  This at the time, preceded our knowledge of a smart meter and its technology.

The symptoms I experienced of nose bleeds, vertigo, dizziness, migraines, heart palpitations, involuntary muscle cramping disappeared the day they replaced the smart meter with a mechanical meter, manually read, per our demand.  This was July 2012.  It will be three years that the symptoms have not re-appeared.

It is very disheartening to hear of Doctors making blanket statements that the symptoms are in people's heads or influenced by what they have read about the dangers of the smart meters.  This was not true for my personal experience and is not true for the thousands who have reported the same thing when the meter was attached to their homes.  For many, they did not even know the utility put a smart meter on their homes as well.

The noise is still present, which I knew it would be because we already had our evidence proving the antenna affect so the noise is in the air and is ubiquitous everywhere the smart grid network is turned on.  That is pretty much everywhere in the USA.  I hear from people all over who are suffering from the constant noise.  This is no mystery that this is the modern day hum that people are hearing. 

Sincerely,

Sandra
www.sandaura.wordpress.com
www.smartmeternewsupdates.wordpress.com

 

Mike Holt Comment: Fifteen years ago when I knew everything I would have dismissed this issue. Today, I know I don’t have the answers to all issues… so who knows…

 

 

 

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Comments
  • This is the first I've heard of this case and I haven't researched it ... but I am an electronics engineer. What jumped out at me was the repetition rate of 217 Hz, which is exactly the packet rate for GSM cell phones (data and encoded voice is not transmitted continuously, but in bursts at a 217 Hz rate). In my field (hum, buzz and other noises that plague sound systems), we normally hear this 217 Hz "buzz" when someone at a conference table puts their cell phone too close to a microphone. The sound system then demodulates the bursts (much like a "crystal set" radio) adding the "buzz" to the sound system. I'm no expert on the wireless meter-reading technology but I'd not be surprised that the transmitter at the meter is the same cell-phone technology (they have a huge network to route the signals, cheap). But, if this is true, I would expect the folks who are sensitive to the meter signals to also be sensitive to most cell phones. It's also important to note that this data is intermittently transmitted by cell phones to establish a "handshake" with the nearest cell system antenna cluster. The only way to stop it is to power-down the phone (or "airplane mode"). I've not made up my mind about how real these "sensitive people" are (I don't have a dog in the fight, as they say) but many of these fields (including 60 Hz magnetic fields in many homes) are easily explained by engineering and basic physics. - Bill Whitlock, Audio Engineering Society Life Fellow, Institute of Electrical & Electronic Engineers Life Senior

    Bill Whitlock  October 27 2015, 9:35 pm EDT

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