DEFEATING LRAD

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Published on 12 Feb 2023 / In Film & Animation

We test a few different methods for protecting yourself against an LRAD system.

Nothing - 3:54
Earplugs - 4:50
Standard Headphones - 5:54
Electronic Headphones - 6:46
Face Shield - 8:21
Riot Shield - 9:23
Source: Tech Ingredients
https://www.youtube.com/@TechIngredients

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Longshanks
Longshanks 2 years ago

I wonder how much better a more metallic riot shield would work. A large buckler if you will, like Captain America's. A metal shield would be heavier, but could also be used as a weapon to bash after closing the distance.

How well these measures would work against microwave energy based crowd control devices?

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Life_N_Times_of_Shane_T_Hanson

I know a lot about a lot of things - kind of like a reference librarian - what is in the books? Fuck knows... there are a lot of books and a lot of study.... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_jamming - follow up the "External links" at the bottom of the web page.

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Life_N_Times_of_Shane_T_Hanson

There are simple answers, and then there are DEEP and COMPLEX answers... The simple answers are relatively easy to give... however the deep and complex answers can require quite a great deal of study to understand and even more to create them.... As shown in the video, its easy to make up a Radio Frequency Shield... but the science behind microwave generators, the power supplies for them, the antenna, making shaped and or directional beams, and how to best burn people with them.... and how to protect yourself against them... well the maths, the physics, the science, the electronics, the circuit designs, the creation of timing chips and oscillators etc... and wave guides it just becomes several courses in a number of fields, at some really good NON WOKE universities... and piles of books etc... Look this guy up: James Clerk Maxwell https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Clerk_Maxwell - He was the guy who Einstein though that the whole of science stood upon his shoulders... "His discoveries helped usher in the era of modern physics, laying the foundation for such fields as special relativity and quantum mechanics. Many physicists regard Maxwell as the 19th-century scientist having the greatest influence on 20th-century physics. His contributions to the science are considered by many to be of the same magnitude as those of Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein.[6] In the millennium poll—a survey of the 100 most prominent physicists—Maxwell was voted the third greatest physicist of all time, behind only Newton and Einstein.[7] On the centenary of Maxwell's birthday, Einstein described Maxwell's work as the "most profound and the most fruitful that physics has experienced since the time of Newton".[8] Einstein, when he visited the University of Cambridge in 1922, was told by his host that he had done great things because he stood on Newton's shoulders; Einstein replied: "No I don't. I stand on the shoulders of Maxwell."[9]"

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Life_N_Times_of_Shane_T_Hanson

Maxwell had studied and commented on electricity and magnetism as early as 1855 when his paper "On Faraday's lines of force" was read to the Cambridge Philosophical Society.[98] The paper presented a simplified model of Faraday's work and how electricity and magnetism are related. He reduced all of the current knowledge into a linked set of differential equations with 20 equations in 20 variables. This work was later published as "On Physical Lines of Force" in March 1861.[99] Around 1862, while lecturing at King's College, Maxwell calculated that the speed of propagation of an electromagnetic field is approximately that of the speed of light. He considered this to be more than just a coincidence, commenting, "We can scarcely avoid the conclusion that light consists in the transverse undulations of the same medium which is the cause of electric and magnetic phenomena.[1] Working on the problem further, Maxwell showed that the equations predict the existence of waves of oscillating electric and magnetic fields that travel through empty space at a speed that could be predicted from simple electrical experiments; using the data available at the time, Maxwell obtained a velocity of 310,740,000 metres per second (1.0195×109 ft/s).[100] In his 1865 paper "A Dynamical Theory of the Electromagnetic Field", Maxwell wrote, "The agreement of the results seems to show that light and magnetism are affections of the same substance, and that light is an electromagnetic disturbance propagated through the field according to electromagnetic laws".[4]

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Life_N_Times_of_Shane_T_Hanson

I will put up a coouple of videos on Newton and Maxwell.....

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bigintol03
bigintol03 2 years ago

Interesting video!

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Life_N_Times_of_Shane_T_Hanson

Yeah - these things work on crowds of unprepared people. Personally I think unless its a legit riot - the people who use LRAD and the Microwave cookers - should be fried alive with their own equipment.

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