Supressed
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Hi,
I have read about EMP on wikipedia but I am still confused about its effect on appliances.
1) If the appliance is not plugged in to the mains ac supply but appliance is on, does the appliance still fry? (I.e if appliance is on but running from battery)
2) If appliance is off but still plugged into ac mains supply, does it fry?
3) If appliance is off and unplugged, does it fry?
4) If appliance frys, what exactly would fry and therefore what spare parts may you need for various appliances if you were preparing for an EMP solar flare.
I read here; **broken link removed**
"Protecting electrical equipment is simple if it can be unplugged from AC outlets, phone systems, or long antennas. But that assumes that you won't be using it when the EMP strikes. That isn't all that practical and--if a nuclear war were drawn out or an attack occurred in waves spread over hours or days-- you'd have to either risk damage to equipment or do without it until things had settled down for sure.
One simple solution is to use battery-operated equipment which has cords or antennas of only 30 inches or less in length. This short stretch of metal puts the device within the troughs of the nuclear-generated EMP wave and will keep the equipment from getting a damaging concentration of electrons. Provided the equipment isn't operated close to some other metal object (i.e., within 8 feet of a metal girder, telephone line, etc.), it should survive without any other precautions being taken with it.
If you don't want to buy a wealth of batteries for every appliance you own or use a radio set up with longer than 30-inch antenna, then you'll need to use equipment that is "hardened" against EMP."
Is this true?
I have read about EMP on wikipedia but I am still confused about its effect on appliances.
1) If the appliance is not plugged in to the mains ac supply but appliance is on, does the appliance still fry? (I.e if appliance is on but running from battery)
2) If appliance is off but still plugged into ac mains supply, does it fry?
3) If appliance is off and unplugged, does it fry?
4) If appliance frys, what exactly would fry and therefore what spare parts may you need for various appliances if you were preparing for an EMP solar flare.
I read here; **broken link removed**
"Protecting electrical equipment is simple if it can be unplugged from AC outlets, phone systems, or long antennas. But that assumes that you won't be using it when the EMP strikes. That isn't all that practical and--if a nuclear war were drawn out or an attack occurred in waves spread over hours or days-- you'd have to either risk damage to equipment or do without it until things had settled down for sure.
One simple solution is to use battery-operated equipment which has cords or antennas of only 30 inches or less in length. This short stretch of metal puts the device within the troughs of the nuclear-generated EMP wave and will keep the equipment from getting a damaging concentration of electrons. Provided the equipment isn't operated close to some other metal object (i.e., within 8 feet of a metal girder, telephone line, etc.), it should survive without any other precautions being taken with it.
If you don't want to buy a wealth of batteries for every appliance you own or use a radio set up with longer than 30-inch antenna, then you'll need to use equipment that is "hardened" against EMP."
Is this true?