ChrisCOD Posted April 11, 2023 Posted April 11, 2023 Hello. I have conducted a measurement recently which showed that I measured in excess of 1500 microteslas from my smart TV. The smart TV was unplugged from the wall and so was therefore turned off. My question is, would this be a normal measurement for a smart TV, and if so, what would be inside the smart TV to cause this measurement arise?
swansont Posted April 11, 2023 Posted April 11, 2023 A microtesla is 0.01 gauss, so you measured 1.5 gauss. That’s about twice the earth’s field; not particularly strong. Where did you measure the field, and does it vary with position, at the same distance from the TV?
StringJunky Posted April 11, 2023 Posted April 11, 2023 (edited) 28 minutes ago, swansont said: A microtesla is 0.01 gauss, so you measured 1.5 gauss. That’s about twice the earth’s field; not particularly strong. Where did you measure the field, and does it vary with position, at the same distance from the TV? Could it be from static electricity in or on the tv? Edited April 11, 2023 by StringJunky
studiot Posted April 11, 2023 Posted April 11, 2023 First and simplest test. Is the gaussmeter reading the same if you remove the TV from the vicinity?
swansont Posted April 11, 2023 Posted April 11, 2023 1 hour ago, StringJunky said: Could it be from static electricity in or on the tv? Static shouldn’t give you a magnetic field. You need current flow or a permanent magnet. A modern unplugged TV screen won’t have either, but speakers have fairly strong magnets.
StringJunky Posted April 11, 2023 Posted April 11, 2023 21 minutes ago, swansont said: Static shouldn’t give you a magnetic field. You need current flow or a permanent magnet. A modern unplugged TV screen won’t have either, but speakers have fairly strong magnets. Right. Yeah, magnets. I was trying to think what is magnetic in a modern tv and forgot about the speakers.
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