Monday, February 3, 2020

two world hums: one is mechanical not-sonic not-recordable 'gravity waves' (john dawes) & one is sonic/recordable (glen macpherson)

initially i thought my tascam dr05 mics were picking up the sputter/rumble/hum i've heard since 2003 so i made a quick midnight recording to sample/compare  visually and aurally the 'ambient noise' with and without the 80Hz low cut filter.

but upon playback i heard <50hz quakelike rumble that thankfully doesnt bother me, but the 50-150hz sputter/rumble/hum that i hear 24/7 were not recorded, and the mics go down to 20hz and successfully recorded the <50hz rumble.  

reluctantly fascinated, i had to start conceding, that the noises i'm hearing are indeed "mechanical not-sonic and not-recordable", just as john dawes described, how these are 'gravity waves' resulting from the interaction of two fields, that of the electric grid with that of nature's lightning-charged ionosphere.

so we're talking about two distinctly different hums, one is sonic recordable ~50hz, the other is mechanical not-sonic not-recordable 50-150hz.  i hear both.

i introduced john dawes briefly in my first post "since 1940s 2-4% can hear the hum, can you?", but then made this discovery of two different and distinct sputter/rumble/hum/tones and had to do a separate post to cover the characteristics of the non-recordable type and how i arrived at this conclusion.  

i immediately shared the two-hum idea with the two leading researchers hosting global surveys, as the only commenter on john dawes' demo video on youtube and via email to dr. glen macpherson (both below).


JOHN DAWES
inertia properties of the hum
gravity waves will interact with any matter that is in a state of acceleration, including parts of the human body (john dawes)


the hum and gravity waves avi  2:27
Jun 1, 2019  john dawes
showing how Gravity Waves affect a moving body
 
1:11 voltage increases as the tops slows down, reaches its peak at 50 RPS. 2:00 graph shows rise and fall of voltage. 2:11 notice at 50 RPS the speed of the top and the frequency of gravity waves are exactly equal.
 

demo: how gravity waves act upon a vibrating reed:
paper hum detector xvid  3:11
Jul 15, 2019  john dawes

1:44 as the speed approaches 50 RPS the paper in acceleration undulates as it interacts with gravity waves (visually 'thickening').  
 
 
revealing the hum avi - 2m
Apr 25, 2019  john dawes

0:04 this experiment shows the hum is mechanical and has nothing to do with radiowaves. 1:38 the hum can't be stopped, but by understanding the nature of the beast, it may be possible to find a means of protection.

i want to understand, but 99% wont takeaway much from this video of clips (the later vids are better aka have more context ex. top spinning, reed spinning). even with you telling us, we dont know what we're looking at re scale, have no reference. 

my takeaway from all 3 of your vids and the gridsick site: the hum is mechanical not electric or EM or RF even if it has sonic/RF characteristics, it cant be recorded. from separate lightning studies we know lightning plays a role in charging the ionosphere.

so there are clearly two hum types: one is sonic/recordable <50hz, one is mechanical not-sonic not-recordable 50-150hz. i proved it to myself with a tascam 20hz to 20khz recorder that picked up the low 'taos/calgary/bristol' quakelike rumble, but did not pickup the 50-150hz sputter/rumble/hum that bothers me.

from other studies we know lightning has a role in charging the ionosphere nearly continuous at approx 100x/second.how can average jane/joe measure it where they are? what letters might we submit to local gov/media to investigate? please make 'how to build meter' video because we need visual instructions, your blurbs are not enough re https://sites.google.com/site/gridsick/hum-recordings

having heard ringing with hum or compressor-like 'sputters' in tandem inside/outside, day/night if quiet enough, in two countries, calgary and sf bay area, all since a sciatic attack 2003, i took your survey and suggest a) a typo fix and b) a note that we can skip questions we dont know the answer to ex. clay vs bedrock foundation and c) you hear fine, but have 'always had high frequency dropoff in one ear (no loss)'. and i would add a couple extra questions that relate to my 60+ symptoms that ultimately all root in progressive nerve damage 'neuropathy' of motor/sensory/autonomic nerves (each type includes 1-2 dozen symptoms): 1. do you have nerve-muscle related issues? (checkbox list of 60+ symptoms: i can supply from GI to skin to muscle burnout/fatigue, weakness, high blood pressure, palpitations, numbing, twitching, hypersensitivities to variety of triggers incl. bright light/glare, kitchen klanking noises, etc.) 2. do computer/phone/car batteries alternators, motherboards or other hardware wearout 3x faster with you than most others? in 15 years i have fried two macbook motherboards, one thinkpad motherboard and one android motherboard, and constant device sluggishness within 1 month of purchase with normal daily usage (some of us are carrying a higher voltage field than rest).
2b.  do you get shocked at light switches or getting out of car or touching people more than a few times/year?

2c.  do you stop crystal quartz watches in under 3 weeks, no matter how fresh the battery replacement?  
3. were you ever electrocuted? curiosity had me cut a lamp cord with scissors age 6 which burned/etched a hole through scissor blade leaving it burned/jagged/unusable and it hurt bad and caused ringing, and i think may have in some way altered my electrical system or triggered/altered my long-term gene/neurological fate aka caused a high freq dropoff in one ear that i've had as far back as that event.


GLEN MACPHERSON
* i believe there are two types of rumble/hums, one sonic/recordable (macpherson), one mechanical/not-recordable (dawes).

i took your world hum survey jan 6, 2020 then made corrections as i am hearing 4 distinct noises that morph into each other.  i do my best to 'not hear it' but it's there anytime i mute the tv or listen for it in a parked car on a quiet street.  for that reason i had to 'study it' closer for 2-3 weeks even though i've heard these noises since 2003.  

i'm the ex-choirboy 'audio/musicianship' guy who started hearing it in tandem with ringing 24/7 since an 03 sciatic attack in two countries, the one who offered up 3 extra questions i'd want to know that relate to me regarding: electrocution, neuropathic symptoms, static charge, etc.

* i hear both a hum and sputter. the hum is smoother easier to cope with and mask, the compressor-like sputter is more penetrating/annoying.
* both have multiple over/undertones and harmonics that fade in/out and the tone itself modulates/bends a bit off center ex revs up/down.

i mix sound, edit video, sang choir, play piano, compose, yet pinpointing is tough, specially when i'm trying since 2003 to mask it 'not hear it'.

* the predominant tone is 138 Hz or C# below middle C with over/undertones between 100-200hz that variate and change keys.
* over 80% of the time i hear a 'giant lawnmower' compressor-like sputter
* the sputter morphs (randomly) into a two or three tone chords.

* next tone above it is F# and at times an F# major chord with A# on top rings:  C# F# A#.  i do not hear the sputter at the same time.
* a third noise that shows up is a sputtering 'laundry wall-banger' sound
* a fourth noise is a two-tone 'train horn' hum that rings in at 53hz G# and 95hz F#.

* when it's a biad/triad hum, it's definitely inside the head, left ear while the right ear rings louder than usual high pitch 7700hz.
* when it's a sputter is seems to emanate from the direction of town/powerlines and a 7700hz ringing is in both ears.  
* i also hear a 7700hz and higher ringing usually in my R ear, nearly continuous, that i do my best to ignore.

so i'm hearing 4 distinct sputter/hum/tones that morph into each other, half or more are clearly inside my head, so i'm inclined to believe the others are too.  also, my tascam 20hz-20khz tascam mics are unable to record the 50-150hz sputter/hum/tones that bother me, but had no problem recording the much lower quake-like 'bristol/taos/calgary' rumbles below 50Hz that dont bother.  

so the 'gravity waves' due to ionsophere/grid voltage interaction is the mechanical not-sonic theory that 'resonates' with me so far.  so i'm clearly hearing what dawes is describing, but i can also hear the sonic <50hz quaklike 'taos/bristol' rumble that has been recorded worldwide.

not sure if it was your survey that asked, but my hearing is 'good, but imperfect in one ear' (wasnt an option in survey).  way back to my first hearing test in 1st grade, i have high freq. dropoff in one ear.  i either mysteriously never had it, or may have lost it when i electrocuted myself at age 5 by cutting the lamp cord to see what would happen.  since 'sciatic attacks' age 30-40 i have assorted neuropathies (impaired nerve function and confused neuro-signalling that i think allow me to hear/see/feel things i normally wouldnt, like how my natural low cut filters stopped working thus hear noise.

i think those with tinnitus might have acute hearing sensitivities aka lose the ability to mask frequencies related to ringing and/or hum/rumble.  what if tinnitus is just the first of multiple sputter/hum/tones noises created by the same phenomena?  i started hearing high pitch 7700hz ringing and sputter/rumble/hum 50-150hz after a sciatic attack in 2003, so for me they came as a tandem package deal and could well be in the same family.

* i believe there are two types of rumble/hums, one sonic/recordable (macpherson), one mechanical/not-recordable (dawes).

i am able to hear both but the mechanical type is more annoying since 2003, but i think you could parse your database along these lines.

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