Good essay - thank you. My doctors apparently have no knowledge of this as when I complain about certain symptoms, they do not suggest I get evaluated for EHS.
Hi Susan, thanks for your feedback. Are you in the US or Canada? I know that in my area of Ontario there's only one doctor that can treat EHS. You could try to get a referral to another practitioner who treats it - or contact the Electrosensitive Society they may be able to help.
The 5G meter is for detecting the microwave radiation emitted by 5G in and around our homes, at higher ranges that other meters can't detect.
I'll consider myself lucky living in a rural area. I can't even get a signal more than half the time. I have to go down the road about half a mile just to get a bar or two. I get a lot of missed calls and VM's. I also use the speakerphone when I do talk. And wireless is cutoff automatically at night and comes back on when everyone is starting to get up in the morning. I put it all on a timer. Anyways, I wanted to recommend a couple of apps to monitor your signal strength. It will also show you approximate tower location on a map, which one your connected to, signal strength for all bands rather it be the cell networks or Wi-Fi along with other handy information. The app is Network Cell Info by M2Catalyst. The other is a Bluetooth scanner which shows you all devices, RSSI signal strength, connected devices, and more. It's called Bluetooth Scanner by Zoltan Pallagi. I like the BT scanner as it shows everything whereas your cell phone will not when doing a BT scan. I installed several but these two are the best. Not many ads or annoying popups. You can purchase the apps and they're fairly cheap. Try them out to see how it works out for you. I like it when I see no signals and that's what I usually see when everything is off at night. I'm in a dead zone.
Hi Roman. I live in northern California. Thanks for the suggestion to contact the ES, I will.
Does the 5G meter register any other EMR? Or is it just for 5G? As yet I own no such meters, mostly because of $$ limitations. I would prefer one meter to read them all, rather than several specialized meters.
Thanks Susan for your question. I hear you on the $ limitations. This meter specifically measures 5G cell towers, 5G cell phone emissions, higher frequency radar and other 5G high band devices. There is another one called the Safe and Sound classic that measures other RF (not 5g) which is a meter everyone should have as well. I would suggest at least starting with that one(ill send a link) or you can also go in on it with your friends and share it, as an idea
It measures some of the lower 5G frequency bands (8GHz), whereas the newer 5G meter I have on the article measures more of the high-energy spectrum of 5G (20-40GHz)
Here's also a basic one that covers many different types of EMF:
Good essay - thank you. My doctors apparently have no knowledge of this as when I complain about certain symptoms, they do not suggest I get evaluated for EHS.
What is the 5G meter for?
Hi Susan, thanks for your feedback. Are you in the US or Canada? I know that in my area of Ontario there's only one doctor that can treat EHS. You could try to get a referral to another practitioner who treats it - or contact the Electrosensitive Society they may be able to help.
The 5G meter is for detecting the microwave radiation emitted by 5G in and around our homes, at higher ranges that other meters can't detect.
Did you have a specific question on it?
Looking into purchasing the device. I have no doubt weтАЩre being eaten up here! Charlotte NC
I'll consider myself lucky living in a rural area. I can't even get a signal more than half the time. I have to go down the road about half a mile just to get a bar or two. I get a lot of missed calls and VM's. I also use the speakerphone when I do talk. And wireless is cutoff automatically at night and comes back on when everyone is starting to get up in the morning. I put it all on a timer. Anyways, I wanted to recommend a couple of apps to monitor your signal strength. It will also show you approximate tower location on a map, which one your connected to, signal strength for all bands rather it be the cell networks or Wi-Fi along with other handy information. The app is Network Cell Info by M2Catalyst. The other is a Bluetooth scanner which shows you all devices, RSSI signal strength, connected devices, and more. It's called Bluetooth Scanner by Zoltan Pallagi. I like the BT scanner as it shows everything whereas your cell phone will not when doing a BT scan. I installed several but these two are the best. Not many ads or annoying popups. You can purchase the apps and they're fairly cheap. Try them out to see how it works out for you. I like it when I see no signals and that's what I usually see when everything is off at night. I'm in a dead zone.
For sure. Yes Charlotte is loaded with 5G. You can take a look/ zoom in on this map for cell tower locations. https://www.speedtest.net/ookla-5g-map
Literally surrounded by them!
UGH... ЁЯШйЁЯШйЁЯШй
Thanks for sharing the link! CanтАЩt wait to show my son all IтАЩve been reading of your information.
Hope you & yours have a great day!
Hi Roman. I live in northern California. Thanks for the suggestion to contact the ES, I will.
Does the 5G meter register any other EMR? Or is it just for 5G? As yet I own no such meters, mostly because of $$ limitations. I would prefer one meter to read them all, rather than several specialized meters.
Thanks Susan for your question. I hear you on the $ limitations. This meter specifically measures 5G cell towers, 5G cell phone emissions, higher frequency radar and other 5G high band devices. There is another one called the Safe and Sound classic that measures other RF (not 5g) which is a meter everyone should have as well. I would suggest at least starting with that one(ill send a link) or you can also go in on it with your friends and share it, as an idea
Link for the device you mentioned? I would like to research all... TY!
Sure thing - here's the link to the Safe & Sound classic RF meter:
https://safelivingtechnologies.com/products/safe-and-sound-classic-ii.html?aff=265
It measures some of the lower 5G frequency bands (8GHz), whereas the newer 5G meter I have on the article measures more of the high-energy spectrum of 5G (20-40GHz)
Here's also a basic one that covers many different types of EMF:
https://safelivingtechnologies.com/products/trifield-emf-meter.html?aff=265
Let me know what questions you have, and I will get back to you eventually (: Safe Living Tech is a good company, independently-owned.