Guest guest Posted May 7, 2008 Report Share Posted May 7, 2008 However I bet the testing doesn't subdivide by frequency, and that seems to affect different people different ways. For Sue, the main problems seem to be: - central locking systems (worst) - car alarm (dashboard fitting) - speakers in doors As a result we now run 3 elderly cars with a combined age of over 40 years! Sue's symptoms are least in the oldest one (no central locking, carburettor, points, and speakers/radio removed), but she can now travel moderate distances in the newer ones (c/l, electronic ignition etc), which is an improvement on 2 years ago. Ian _____ From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Bill Bruno Sent: 04 May 2008 16:25 Subject: Re: Offending electronics databse In the US, every piece of electronics is tested for FCC emissions limits. If that data were made public, we'd be in great shape... Bill On Sun, May 4, 2008 at 7:14 AM, <paulpjcaol (DOT) <mailto:paulpjc%40aol.com> com> wrote: > Pity we cant set up an offending electronics database, very sub > divided/catogorised, for instance I can now drive my wifes Renault scenic > with minimul > symptoms all because I took out the climate control sensor/fan/regulator > thing > which was situated very close to the drivers head. If we all listed the > numerous offending items/aparatus maybe we could begin to see patterns > etc.. you > know what I mean. > > uk > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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