Xref: utzoo unix-pc.general:7218 comp.sys.att:11471 Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!sdd.hp.com!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!linac!att!pacbell.com!pacbell!ctnews!mitisft!dold From: dold@mitisft.Convergent.COM (Clarence Dold) Newsgroups: unix-pc.general,comp.sys.att Subject: Re: microwaved people (was Brownouts, shorts, ...) Message-ID: <1761@mitisft.Convergent.COM> Date: 12 Jan 91 01:23:20 GMT References: <37881@cup.portal.com> Organization: Convergent Technologies, San Jose, CA Lines: 25 in article <37881@cup.portal.com>, thad@cup.portal.com (Thad P Floryan) says: > "rumored" to have occured either at Ft. Bliss TX (Air Defense School) or at > White Sands Missile Range circa late '50s or early '60s: a soldier took a > shortcut through the "beam" in a multi-megawatt RADAR installation and keeled > over, and it wasn't apparent what happened until after the autopsy: certain > internal organs were cooked. This incident is "rumored" to have been the I worked on Heavy ground Radar in the Air Force, with pulses transmitted at ~ 5 MegaWatts. While on the roof of one of the buildings, I heard a bzzt-bzzt-bzzt that would repeat occasionally. After a minute or two, I realized it was the cyclone fence rattling from the radar emissions of a radar set about 75 feet away. We were supposed to be in a 'blanked' area of the radar set, but obviously we weren't. I have no known side effects from this exposure ( although I am losing my hair now, 20 years later ). When the radar was dismantled in 1976, we found flies inside the waveguide. They were dead, but I imagine they starved. They didn't look burned, even after 20 years of fairly constant high level radar exposure. Hmm, a 20 year old fly carcass? Never thought about that before. -- --- Clarence A Dold - dold@tsmiti.Convergent.COM (408) 435-5293 ...pyramid!ctnews!tsmiti!dold FAX (408) 435-3105 P.O.Box 6685, San Jose, CA 95150-6685 MS#10-007