Gas lawn mowers and two-stroke chain saws can create much interference. Cars, too. I don’t like working near heavy traffic. Diesel engines not so bad.
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L-rod technique and tips
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Tip #3: A couple ways to recharge yourself. Rub the palms of your hands together for sixty seconds. This stimulated the acupuncture meridians. Another one is turn on water faucet and hold the palms of your hands near the running water. There is an ion flow. I think I already mentioned an ion bracelet/power band.
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Once you rub the palms of your hands together (sixty seconds is a long time) start with your hands wide apart and bring them closer to each other. You should feel some pressure as they get closer together. The distance between your hands at that point is an indicator of how good the locating conditions are. Wider is better. You should get a lot better rod response, but it doesn?t last a long time, but it is worthwhile.Originally posted by Mike(Mont) View PostTip #3: A couple ways to recharge yourself. Rub the palms of your hands together for sixty seconds. This stimulated the acupuncture meridians. Another one is turn on water faucet and hold the palms of your hands near the running water. There is an ion flow. I think I already mentioned an ion bracelet/power band.
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Lately I have been messing with a UDB1000S DDS and an NPN amplifier and L-rods. I have been wasting my life away on an all electronic device I call the Contraption. Pretty much drove me crazy. LOL
I used a 2222A transistor. They are cheap. I would advise not to touch the ground probes. Could be electrical shock.
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If you build this you don't need frequency counter or LED. The DDS has the exact frequency. But you will need wiring.Originally posted by Mike(Mont) View PostLately I have been messing with a UDB1000S DDS and an NPN amplifier and L-rods. I have been wasting my life away on an all electronic device I call the Contraption. Pretty much drove me crazy. LOL
I used a 2222A transistor. They are cheap. I would advise not to touch the ground probes. Could be electrical shock.
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Tip #40: People asked about finding an unknown frequency. Here is a video by Tim Williams LRLMAN.com that explains his theory. If you use metric use 343 meters (and measure distance in meters) instead of 1100 feet per second (speed of sound). Actually you can do a search for speed of sound calculator for you temperature to get more accuracy.
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Tip #41: Triangulation app for iPhone called Theodolite. There might be other similar apps for other phone types, I don’t know. Here is a video on it.
HTTPS://m.YouTube.com/watch?v=o9ieCuQu-yw You aim your phone camera at the target direction from two different places and it will show you the spot on a satellite photo.
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All this got my mind wondering. Speed of sound is affected by temperature. 50 degrees F (10 C) speed is 1106 feetOriginally posted by Mike(Mont) View PostTip #40: People asked about finding an unknown frequency. Here is a video by Tim Williams LRLMAN.com that explains his theory. If you use metric use 343 meters (and measure distance in meters) instead of 1100 feet per second (speed of sound). Actually you can do a search for speed of sound calculator for you temperature to get more accuracy.
HTTPS://m.YouTube.com/watch?v=TW6aGEpPqck
per second. At 70 degrees F (21.1 C) speed is 1128 feeet per second. That is almost 2% faster. So an LRL frequency of say 405 Hz would be multiplied by 0.98 gives 396.9 Hz. That might not seem like much difference but I saw two tuning forks one at 440 Hz and another at 442 Hz. They do not resonate each other. Now I might not have this correct but it says higher temperatures make quite a difference in resonate frequencies.
Now I could have this the exact opposite. Colder temperatures make for a longer wavelength so that. I admit I am confused. Guess I will sleep on it study it tomorrow.
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Logic says that since elements vibrate faster at warmer temperatures it seems the resonant frequency must go higher also, not lower. So if a target resonates at 402.4 Hz at 50 F (10C) it should maybe resonate at 410.4 Hz at 70 F (21.1 C). 1106 feet per second vs 1128 FPS. And at 80 F (26.7 C) 1106 FPS vs 1138 FPS it should maybe might possibly resonate at 414.04 Hz. Okay I am waiting for someone to show me where I went wrong with my "logic".
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