Bunsen wrote:With a CME-induced geomagnetic storm, anything not plugged into the power grid or a very large antenna will be just fine.
There are scientists who disagree with you.
And what isn't plugged into the power grid these days?
Moderators: raptor, ZS Global Moderators
Bunsen wrote:With a CME-induced geomagnetic storm, anything not plugged into the power grid or a very large antenna will be just fine.


mzmadmike wrote:There are scientists who disagree with you.
And what isn't plugged into the power grid these days?
Excellent post. My feelings exactly.DrunkWookiee wrote:Hurricane, Why bother?
Nuclear War, Why bother?
Economic Collapse, Why bother?
Zombies, Why bother?
This is a preparedness forum. Preparing for the worse and hoping for the best.
Some of the responses on this thread sound like the stuff we all hear from non-preppers.
mzmadmike wrote:Kube wrote:Meh. While I love my electronics, I've set myself up where I think I could get by without them.
Does that include your car, your phone, your water, your gas, your sewage system, all stores, and electricity?
Jeriah wrote:I think we're all pretty much just bullshitting here, which is what the Internet is for. Besides porn.
vyadmirer wrote:Call me the paranoid type, but remember I'm on a post apocalyptic website prepared for zombies.

Meh. While I love my electronics, I've set myself up where I think I could get by without them.
Does that include your car, your phone, your water, your gas, your sewage system, all stores, and electricity?
kiwilrdg wrote:Meh. While I love my electronics, I've set myself up where I think I could get by without them.
Does that include your car, your phone, your water, your gas, your sewage system, all stores, and electricity?
Car: My 73 beetle has no electronics and I have replacement electrical parts available if anything does fry.
Phone: I hate it anyway
Water: Ram pump is ready to be reinstalled
Gas: I would eat more beans so I would have more gas, but my house has no gas
Sewage system: If the EMP knocks out gravity and decompositional flora so my septic doesn't work I think I would be dead too
Stores: We do a lot of bartering already
Electricity: A little inconvenient.
Step away from the computer and get a life.

mzmadmike wrote:...Awesomeness...

Bunsen wrote:I'd like to read what those scientists have to say on the matter, then.

It ain't all about you, bucko.
kiwilrdg wrote:Step away from the computer and get a life.

kiwilrdg wrote:
Step away from the computer and get a life.
mzmadmike wrote:The carrying capacity of this continent without modern infrastructure for food production and delivery is 100 million people.
There are 400 million people on this continent.
It ain't all about you, bucko.
Jeriah wrote:I think we're all pretty much just bullshitting here, which is what the Internet is for. Besides porn.
It certainly does, but that report seems to support my previous assertions. On the ground (satellites are another matter entirely), only things directly connected to miles of elevated wire are prone to damage. Stuff plugged into the outlets at home should suffer no damage, just a loss of power.mzmadmike wrote:Bunsen wrote:I'd like to read what those scientists have to say on the matter, then.
National Academy of Science work for you?
http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=12507
Which one melted transmission lines? I can't find anything about that. As for the satellites, those are vulnerable to damage in ways that anything protected by the atmosphere isn't: direct radiation damage to the circuitry and solar panels, and static charging on exposed surfaces. Since we've come to better understand those things in the last few decades, modern satellites are designed to resist them better than the older ones were. Plenty of them would still be damaged in a large storm, though, and even those that weren't damaged would likely suffer service disruptions during the storm.Notice a really MINOR event cost several billion in workarounds and probably took out a satellite.
A major one was documented to melt transmission lines.
kiwilrdg wrote:What prep for EMP is there that is not part of other preps?

Dawgboy wrote:FYI: The Astronomical Observatories of Caltech (Where I work) Are busily shielding all kinds of sensitive "one of a kind" electronics, and getting spares on the shelf for the more common stuff. As the IT manager at one of the Observatories, I am being thrust into this. One thing we are doing is all new network cable is now Shielded twisted pair. Also, Instrument wiring packages are being wrapped with Shielding and we are installing Lightning arrestors all over the place on the theory that they will take the pulse, instead of the device.
Contingency plans are a part of the job, for the first time in my IT career.
Abacus wrote:Good luck and welcome to Zombie Squad, don't fuck it up.
Jeriah wrote:I think we're all pretty much just bullshitting here, which is what the Internet is for. Besides porn.
Jeriah wrote:I think we're all pretty much just bullshitting here, which is what the Internet is for. Besides porn.
Return to Contingency Planning & Preparation
Users browsing this forum: Maast and 2 guests