These stopped working since 2G, since it uses radically less power. Altho I did recall seeing some fancy phone cases with blinkies on 3G… never could replicate it sadly. I guess with a lot of joule thief/stepup circuits it might work…
They have am much lower current and voltage requirement, so might me more sensitive. You can also do tuning to use different sized antenna. However that strays into analogue eletronics, which I've not really touched for 15 years.
I've tested a few microwaves from different manufacturers with my phone a few years ago. I think I looked at some file in my router (OpenWRT), but I can't recall. I got a lot of dropped packets each time. The amount of degradation was similar for the different microwaves.
I had to put the phone close to the microwave to detect this. The degradation was obviously stronger when the phone was closer.
If your friend experiences noticeable degradation regardless of the distance within the room, it might be worrisome.
But I think it's normal to have some interference. That doesn't necessarily mean enough of the 2.4 GHz radiation escapes the microwave to be harmful to an animal, as Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and so on are very weak, comparatively.
Funny thing is, after putting my phone inside a closed turned off microwave, it got Wi-Fi, although very weak. I didn't try that with all the microwaves, but with 2 or 3 of them.
I think the Faraday cage around the microwave was built to be good enough for safety, but it wasn't built with Wi-Fi interference in mind.
Disclaimer: I might be wrong, as I don't have enough background to make any bold claims.
> If your friend experiences noticeable degradation regardless of the distance within the room, it might be worrisome.
Probably not. I recall calculating it once, and the legal requirements for microwave oven shielding still allow it to produce a few watts of 2.4Ghz leakage. This is contrasted to 50mW typical WiFi AP power, and 5-50mW BlueTooth powers.
A few watts is totally non-dangerous to humans, especially diffused across the entire door.
Sounds like he’s in need of a new microwave. Not tongue-in-cheek; sounds like there’s something up with the shielding, and if it’s not visible, how will you know if it gets worse?
Edit: I see no reason this wouldn’t work, however?
Other than phones and laptops (i.e. "real computers"), most devices only support 2.4, no? I can't recall the last time I set up a non-computer device that didn't say "make sure you're using a 2.4GHz network"...
(I imagine it's a much lower cost to only handle 2.4GHz?)
Depends on the length of the antenna. I'd bet you can get a length close enough to be a quarter-wave 5Ghz and 1/2-wave 2.4ghz antenna. Just buy a 2.4/5Ghz combo antenna and slap the diodes across it.
Remember those little LED keychains for your "mobile phone" that would magically light up when taking/making calls and sending/receiving texts?
These stopped working since 2G, since it uses radically less power. Altho I did recall seeing some fancy phone cases with blinkies on 3G… never could replicate it sadly. I guess with a lot of joule thief/stepup circuits it might work…
curious, so if you build a "wall" of these, it would use up the wiress energy in the air so will absorb the excess waves around you?
Of course. Ambient radiation is a viable power source for distributed sensor networks and similar low-power stuff.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_harvesting
Depends if you are standing infront or behind the wall ;)
Can this be used to detect radiation escaping a microwave oven?
A friend of mine has a microwave that noticeably degrades his wifi when it is in use.
You could subsitute the LED for a moving coil meter: https://www.codrey.com/electrical/moving-coil-meter/
They have am much lower current and voltage requirement, so might me more sensitive. You can also do tuning to use different sized antenna. However that strays into analogue eletronics, which I've not really touched for 15 years.
I've tested a few microwaves from different manufacturers with my phone a few years ago. I think I looked at some file in my router (OpenWRT), but I can't recall. I got a lot of dropped packets each time. The amount of degradation was similar for the different microwaves.
I had to put the phone close to the microwave to detect this. The degradation was obviously stronger when the phone was closer.
If your friend experiences noticeable degradation regardless of the distance within the room, it might be worrisome.
But I think it's normal to have some interference. That doesn't necessarily mean enough of the 2.4 GHz radiation escapes the microwave to be harmful to an animal, as Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and so on are very weak, comparatively.
Funny thing is, after putting my phone inside a closed turned off microwave, it got Wi-Fi, although very weak. I didn't try that with all the microwaves, but with 2 or 3 of them.
I think the Faraday cage around the microwave was built to be good enough for safety, but it wasn't built with Wi-Fi interference in mind.
Disclaimer: I might be wrong, as I don't have enough background to make any bold claims.
> If your friend experiences noticeable degradation regardless of the distance within the room, it might be worrisome.
Probably not. I recall calculating it once, and the legal requirements for microwave oven shielding still allow it to produce a few watts of 2.4Ghz leakage. This is contrasted to 50mW typical WiFi AP power, and 5-50mW BlueTooth powers.
A few watts is totally non-dangerous to humans, especially diffused across the entire door.
Sounds like he’s in need of a new microwave. Not tongue-in-cheek; sounds like there’s something up with the shielding, and if it’s not visible, how will you know if it gets worse?
Edit: I see no reason this wouldn’t work, however?
The article says: "responds to [...] microwave oven leakage".
For devices where connectivity is more important, switch them from 2.4Ghz to 5Ghz to avoid microwave interference.
Other than phones and laptops (i.e. "real computers"), most devices only support 2.4, no? I can't recall the last time I set up a non-computer device that didn't say "make sure you're using a 2.4GHz network"...
(I imagine it's a much lower cost to only handle 2.4GHz?)
I made hundreds of these. Never worked
So the question is how to do similar for 5ghz?
For 2.4 GHz each leg of the antenna should be 30 mm. For 5 GHz just under 15 mm.
See Dipole Calculator: https://www.omnicalculator.com/physics/dipole
And you need a faster diode.
Faster diode, like HSMS-2850 [1], and different leg lengths (tune for 5Ghz).
[1] https://datasheet4u.com/pdf-down/H/S/M/HSMS-2862_AgilentTech...
Thanks. Appreciate the reply. From a brief look that might detect 2.4ghz too?
Really wish I was clever enough to do electronics!
Depends on the length of the antenna. I'd bet you can get a length close enough to be a quarter-wave 5Ghz and 1/2-wave 2.4ghz antenna. Just buy a 2.4/5Ghz combo antenna and slap the diodes across it.
I love simple solution like this. It'd be cool just wandering around being able to detect mobile and stuff with a tiny led.
This sort of thing is definitely why I come the HN.
Just curious, what does your username stand for? :D
Nothing. obviously the last bit stands for hacker news. Just randomly pressed letters.
Okay, I was just curious because you were saying nice things about HN and there's a popular abbreviation IFL for I Fucking Love, so I had to wonder!