You're not protected from microwaves... yet - Part 2

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Published 2022-03-20

All Comments (21)
  • @sshuggi
    Pyrotechnics, distilling your own alcohol, off-grid solar, energy weapon defense... I think this is secretly becoming an apocalypse preparedness channel.
  • @GregoMorgan
    A wireless mic seems like a pretty effective detecting device as well.
  • @dirtybird2202
    When i worked in the RV industry, one of our jobs was to test all microwaves and we used a neon bulb embedded in silicone to keep the bulb from breakage. In the microwave it would glow while running the microwave we also tested for leakage outside the microwave. This is cheap takes a very little time to make and is very accurate. You could make a wrist band with a neon bulb as a detector. Many old appliances had these bulbs in them to. I always seem to find me a free one to make a detector out of. And they work and last forever as long as the bulb isn't broken. You can just clip the wires off as they aren't needed. we used a clear silicone to embed the bulb and a 25 cent gumball toy has a clear case to embed the bulb in with the silicone. Let the Silicone cure overnight, and you have a new tool to detect microwaves. Cheap, dependable and long lasting.
  • @Mr_Wh1
    I am glad that Tech Ingredients recognize and acknowledge the recent events. Things are ramping up at a concerning rate, and the main stream media isn't covering it, but rather covering it up.
  • @sbcinema
    I can picture a police officer trying to tell his colleagues how he was chased away by a Protester with a Lightsaber 🤣👍
  • @jessestorm1987
    Really appreciate people like you. Sane, sensible, but not ignorant to the troubling direction this world is taking
  • Exercise your Constitutional right to assembly, and protest, and protect yourself from dubious forces that may not have any respect for your rights under the Constitution. Good show professor!
  • @darwinprime
    That microwave detecting shield is a slice of genius, and it's dramatic.
  • @planetwally
    A chocolate bar in your pocket has been known to detect microwave radiation :)
  • @tgirard123
    Years ago I worked for a company that made glass panels that were filled with argon and had a sheet of electrically conductive tinting in the middle. They were used on a building here in the Bay area called the Blue cube. I was told they were all grounded together so that nobody could hear any sort of radio frequencies inside the cube
  • @MBroam
    This has been a fascinating series. I also want to thank you, you put out some videos a year or 2 back at the beginning of our current dilemma that spoke to the knowledge of certain levels of personal atmospheric filtration, against what much was being said at the time (advice that was soon reversed)_. I took those lessons to heart and consider it a large part of why I did not fall critically ill and why I am still here. Thank you!
  • @robt7785
    Man, you do a lot of good for the community. I am disturbed by any government that would use this on their own citizens too. Gonna become a patron.
  • @johnwiley8417
    One of the first production/broadcast studios I built was Faraday caged with aluminum sheets that the local paper used in their offset press. 1400 kHz at 1000 watts, antenna < 100 feet away from the new studio. Forty years later, and they still use it.