302 lines
17 KiB
Prolog
302 lines
17 KiB
Prolog
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Copyright (C) Duncan Long 1989. All rights reserved.
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PROTECTING YOURSELF FROM EMP
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by
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DUNCAN LONG
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EMP. The letters spell burnt out computers and other electrical systems
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and perhaps even a return to the dark ages if it were to mark the beginning of
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a nuclear war. But it doesn't need to be that way. Once you understand EMP,
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you can take a few simple precautions to protect yourself and equipment from
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it. In fact, you can enjoy much of the "high tech" life style you've come
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accustomed to even after the use of a nuclear device has been used by ter-
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rorists--or there is an all-out WWIII.
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EMP (Electro-Magnetic Pulse), also sometimes known as "NEMP" (Nuclear
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Electromagnetic Pulse), was kept secret from the public for a long time and was
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first discovered more or less by accident when US Military tests of nuclear
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weapons started knocking out phone banks and other equipment miles from ground
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zero.
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EMP is no longer "top secret" but information about it is still a little
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sketchy and hard to come by. Adding to the problems is the fact that its
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effects are hard to predict; even electronics designers have to test their
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equipment in powerful EMP simulators before they can be sure it is really
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capable of with standing the effect.
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EMP occurs with all nuclear explosions. With smaller explosions the
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effects are less pronounced. Nuclear bursts close to the ground are dampened
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by the earth so that EMP effects are more or less confined to the region of the
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blast and heat wave. But EMP becomes more pronounced and wide spread as the
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size and altitude of a nuclear blast is increased since the ground; of these
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two, altitude is the quickest way to produce greater EMP effects. As a nuclear
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device is exploded higher up, the earth soaks up fewer of the free electrons
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produced before they can travel some distance.
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The most "enhanced" EMP effects would occur if a nuclear weapon were
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exploded in space, outside the Earth's atmosphere. In such a case, the gamma
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radiation released during the flash cycle of the weapon would react with the
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upper layer of the earth's atmosphere and strip electrons free from the air
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molecules, producing electromagnetic radiation similar to broad-band radio
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waves (10 kHz-100 MHz) in the process. These electrons would follow the
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earth's magnetic field and quickly circle toward the ground where they would be
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finally dampened. (To add to the confusion, we now have two more EMP terms:
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"Surface EMP" or "SEMP" which refers to ground bursts with limited-range
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effects and "High-altitude EMP" or "HEMP" which is the term used for a nuclear
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detonation creating large amounts of EMP.)
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Tactically, a space-based nuclear attack has a lot going for it; the
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magnetic field of the earth tends to spread out EMP so much that just one 20-MT
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bomb exploded at an altitude of 200 miles could--in theory--blanket the
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continental US with the effects of EMP. It's believed that the electrical
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surge of the EMP from such an explosion would be strong enough to knock out
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much of the civilian electrical equipment over the whole country. Certainly
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this is a lot of "bang for the buck" and it would be foolish to think that a
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nuclear attack would be launched without taking advantage of the confusion a
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high-altitude explosion could create. Ditto with its use by terrorists should
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the technology to get such payloads into space become readily available to
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smaller countries and groups.
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But there's no need for you to go back to the stone age if a nuclear war
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occurs. It is possible to avoid much of the EMP damage that could be done to
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electrical equipment--including the computer that brought this article to you--
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with just a few simple precautions.
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First of all, it's necessary to get rid of a few erroneous facts, however.
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One mistaken idea is that EMP is like a powerful bolt of lightning. While
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the two are alike in their end results--burning out electrical equipment with
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intense electronic surges--EMP is actually more akin to a super-powerful radio
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wave. Thus, strategies based on using lightning arrestors or lightning-rod
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grounding techniques are destined to failure in protecting equipment from EMP.
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Another false concept is that EMP "out of the blue" will fry your brain
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and/or body the way lightning strikes do. In the levels created by a nuclear
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weapon, it would not pose a health hazard to plants, animals, or man PROVIDED
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it isn't concentrated.
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EMP can be concentrated.
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That could happen if it were "pulled in" by a stretch of metal. If this
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happened, EMP would be dangerous to living things. It could become concen-
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trated by metal girders, large stretches of wiring (including telephone lines),
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long antennas, or similar set ups. So--if a nuclear war were in the offing--
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you'd do well to avoid being very close to such concentrations. (A safe
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distance for nuclear-generated EMP would be at least 8 feet from such stretches
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of metal.)
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This concentration of EMP by metal wiring is one reason that most e-
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lectrical equipment and telephones would be destroyed by the electrical surge.
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It isn't that the equipment itself is really all that sensitive, but that the
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surge would be so concentrated that nothing working on low levels of electric-
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ity would survive.
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Protecting electrical equipment is simple if it can be unplugged from AC
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outlets, phone systems, or long antennas. But that assumes that you won't be
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using it when the EMP strikes. That isn't all that practical and--if a nuclear
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war were drawn out or an attack occurred in waves spread over hours or days--
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you'd have to either risk damage to equipment or do without it until things had
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settled down for sure.
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One simple solution is to use battery-operated equipment which has cords
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or antennas of only 30 inches or less in length. This short stretch of metal
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puts the device within the troughs of the nuclear-generated EMP wave and will
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keep the equipment from getting a damaging concentration of electrons.
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Provided the equipment isn't operated close to some other metal object (i.e.,
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within 8 feet of a metal girder, telephone line, etc.), it should survive
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without any other precautions being taken with it.
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If you don't want to buy a wealth of batteries for every appliance you own
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or use a radio set up with longer than 30-inch antenna, then you'll need to use
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equipment that is "hardened" against EMP.
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The trick is that it must REALLY be hardened from the real thing, not just
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EMP-proof on paper. This isn't all that easy; the National Academy of Sciences
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recently stated that tailored hardening is "not only deceptively difficult,
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but also very poorly understood by the defense-electronics community." Even
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the US Military has equipment which might not survive a nuclear attack, even
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though it is designed to do just that.
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That said, there are some methods which will help to protect circuits
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from EMP and give you an edge if you must operate ham radios or the like when a
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nuclear attack occurs. Design considerations include the use of tree formation
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circuits (rather than standard loop formations); the use of induction shielding
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around components; the use of self-contained battery packs; the use of loop
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antennas; and (with solid-state components) the use of Zener diodes. These
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design elements can eliminate the chance an EMP surge from power lines or long
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antennas damaging your equipment. Another useful strategy is to use grounding
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wires for each separate instrument which is coupled into a system so that EMP
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has more paths to take in grounding itself.
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A new device which may soon be on the market holds promise in allowing
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electronic equipment to be EMP hardened. Called the "Ovonic threshold device",
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it has been created by Energy Conversion Devices of Troy, MI. The Ovonic
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threshold device is a solid-state switch capable of quickly opening a path to
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ground when a circuit receives a massive surge of EMP. Use of this or a
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similar device would assure survival of equipment during a massive surge of
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electricity.
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Some electrical equipment is innately EMP-resistant. This includes
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large electric motors, vacuum tube equipment, electrical generators, trans-
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formers, relays, and the like. These might even survive a massive surge of EMP
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and would likely to survive if a few of the above precautions were taking in
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their design and deployment.
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At the other end of the scale of EMP resistance are some really sensitive
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electrical parts. These include IC circuits, microwave transistors, and Field
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Effect Transistors (FET's). If you have electrical equipment with such com-
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ponents, it must be very well protected if it is to survive EMP.
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One "survival system" for such sensitive equipment is the Faraday box.
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A Faraday box is simply a metal box designed to divert and soak up the
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EMP. If the object placed in the box is insulated from the inside surface of
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the box, it will not be effected by the EMP traveling around the outside metal
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surface of the box. The Faraday box simple and cheap and often provides more
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protection to electrical components than "hardening" through circuit designs
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which can't be (or haven't been) adequately tested.
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Many containers are suitable for make-shift Faraday boxes: cake boxes,
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ammunition containers, metal filing cabinets, etc., etc., can all be used.
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Despite what you may have read or heard, these boxes do NOT have to be air-
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tight due to the long wave length of EMP; boxes can be made of wire screen or
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other porous metal.
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The only two requirements for protection with a Faraday box are: (1) the
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equipment inside the box does NOT touch the metal container (plastic, wadded
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paper, or cardboard can all be used to insulate it from the metal) and (2) the
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metal shield is continuous without any gaps between pieces or extra-large holes
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in it.
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Grounding a Faraday box is NOT necessary and in some cases actually may be
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less than ideal. While EMP and lightning aren't the "same animal", a good
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example of how lack of grounding is a plus can be seen with some types of
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lightning strikes. Take, for example, a lightning strike on a flying air-
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plane. The strike doesn't fry the plane's occupants because the metal shell of
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the plane is a Faraday box of sorts. Even though the plane, high over the
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earth, isn't grounded it will sustain little damage.
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In this case, much the same is true of small Faraday cages and EMP.
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Consequently, storage of equipment in Faraday boxes on wooden shelves or the
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like does NOT require that everything be grounded. (One note: theoretically
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non-grounded boxes might hold a slight charge of electricity; take some time
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and care before handling ungrounded boxes following a nuclear attack.)
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The thickness of the metal shield around the Faraday box isn't of much
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concern, either. This makes it possible to build protection "on the cheap" by
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simply using the cardboard packing box that equipment comes in along with
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aluminum foil. Just wrap the box with the aluminum foil (other metal foil or
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metal screen will also work); tape the foil in place and you're done. Provided
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it is kept dry, the cardboard will insulate the gear inside it from the foil;
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placing the foil-wrapped box inside a larger cardboard box is also wise to be
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sure the foil isn't accidentally ripped anywhere. The result is an "instant"
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Faraday box with your equipment safely stored inside, ready for use following a
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nuclear war.
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Copper or aluminum foil can help you insulate a whole room from EMP
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as well. Just paper the wall, ceiling and floor with metal foil. Ideally the
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floor is then covered with a false floor of wood or with heavy carpeting to
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insulate everything and everyone inside from the shield (and EMP). The only
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catch to this is that care must be taken NOT to allow electrical wiring
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connections to pierce the foil shield (i.e., no AC powered equipment or radio
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antennas can come into the room from outside). Care must also be taken that
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the door is covered with foil AND electrically connected to the shield with a
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wire and screws or some similar set up.
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Many government civil defense shelters are now said to have gotten the
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Faraday box, "foil" treatment. These shelters are covered inside with metal
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foil and have metal screens which cover all air vents and are connected to the
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metal foil. Some of these shelters probably make use of new optical fiber
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systems--protected by plastic pipe--to "connect" communications gear inside the
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room to the "outside world" without creating a conduit for EMP energy to enter
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the shelter.
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Another "myth" that seems to have grown up with information on EMP is that
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nearly all cars and trucks would be "knocked out" by EMP. This seems logical,
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but is one of those cases where "real world" experiments contradict theoretical
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answers and I'm afraid this is the case with cars and EMP. According to
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sources working at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, cars have proven to be
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resistant to EMP in actual tests using nuclear weapons as well as during more
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recent tests (with newer cars) with the US Military's EMP simulators.
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One reason for the ability of a car to resist EMP lies in the fact that
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its metal body is "insulated" by its rubber tires from the ground. This
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creates a Faraday cage of sorts. (Drawing on the analogy of EMP being similar
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to lightning, it is interesting to note that cases of lightning striking and
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damaging cars is almost non-existent; this apparently carries over to EMP
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effects on vehicles as well.)
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Although Faraday boxes are generally made so that what is inside doesn't
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touch the box's outer metal shield (and this is especially important for the
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do-it-yourselfer since it is easy to inadvertently ground the Faraday box--say
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by putting the box on metal shelving sitting on a concrete floor), in the
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case of the car the "grounded" wiring is grounded only to the battery. In
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practice, the entire system is not grounded in the traditional electrical
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wiring sense of actually making contact to the earth at some point in its
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circuitry. Rather the car is sitting on insulators made of rubber.
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It is important to note that cars are NOT 100 percent EMP proof; some cars
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will most certainly be effected, especially those with fiberglass bodies or
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located near large stretches of metal. (I suspect, too, that recent cars with
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a high percentage of IC circuitry might also be more susceptible to EMP
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effects.)
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The bottom line is that all vehicles probably won't be knocked out by
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EMP. But the prudent survivalist should make a few contingency plans "just in
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case" his car (and other electrical equipment) does not survive the effects of
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EMP. Discovering that you have one of the few cars knocked out would not be a
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good way to start the onset of terrorist attack or nuclear war.
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Most susceptable to EMP damage would be cars with a lot of IC circuits or
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other "computers" to control essential changes in the engine. The very prudent
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may wish to buy spare electronic ignition parts and keep them a car truck
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(perhaps inside a Faraday box). But it seems probable that many vehicles WILL
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be working following the start of a nuclear war even if no precautions have
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been taken with them.
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One area of concern are explosives connected to electrical discharge
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wiring or designed to be set off by other electric devices. These might be
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set off by an EMP surge. While most citizens don't have access to such
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equipment, claymore mines and other explosives would be very dangerous to be
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around at the start of a nuclear box if they weren't carefully stored away in a
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Faraday box. Ammunition, mines, grenades and the like in large quantities
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might be prone to damage or explosion by EMP, but in general aren't all that
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sensitive to EMP.
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A major area of concern when it comes to EMP is nuclear reactors located
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in the US. Unfortunately, a little-known Federal dictum prohibits the NRC from
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requiring power plants to withstand the effects of a nuclear war. This means
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that, in the event of a nuclear war, many nuclear reactors' control systems
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might will be damaged by an EMP surge. In such a case, the core-cooling
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controls might become inoperable and a core melt down and breaching of the
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containment vessel by radioactive materials into the surrounding area might
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well result. (If you were needing a reason not to live down wind from a
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nuclear reactor, this is it.)
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Provided you're not next door to a nuclear power plant, most of the ill
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effects of EMP can be over come. EMP, like nuclear blasts and fallout, can be
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survived if you have the know how and take a few precautions before hand.
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And that would be worth a lot, wouldn't it?
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============================================================================
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The author of this article, Duncan Long, is well-known as the writer of many
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gun, self-sufficiency, and survival books. His firearms books are listed
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(along with other interesting books) in a free catalog available from Paladin
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Press, P. O. Box 1307, Boulder, CO 80306 (303) 443-7250. Long's NUCLEAR WAR
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SURVIVAL is available for $14 from Long Survival Publications, 115 Riverview
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Dr., Wamego, KS 66547. Long has also recently had a post-nuclear war sci-fi
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book, ANTI-GRAV UNLIMITED released from Avon Books (available from local book
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stores or from Avon Books, 105 Madison Ave., NY, NY 10016; for autographed
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copy, send $4 to: Long Survival Publications, address above). |