Students Science Experiment Shows Plants Wont Grow Near WiFi Router

heckler73

Well-Known Member
@heckler73 so theres anecdotal and scientific evidence fer ya . I dont just put shit out there without extensive research:)
:lol:
Is it possible the seeds of your friend rotted because of poor management or excessive temperature?

Now that I'm thinking about it, there may be an app for phones/tablets (WiFi Analyzer for Android is what I snagged) which allow one to measure the spectrum (to some degree) in an area.
One can conduct a refined data gathering experiment quite easily and see for one's self.

In fact, I just did that. It didn't matter where I went, the sum total of WiFi signals from multiple sources in the neighbourhood wind up washing every damn plant in the entire house with milli-Watts of EM signals at ~2.3GHz. :lol:


We exist in a very polluted EM field every breathing moment, in every technologically developed, geographical area of infinitesimals on this planet! Perhaps putting plants near routers will shield them? :mrgreen:

How about this for an experiment; take a lengthy piece of copper, and a lengthy piece of zinc (long galvanized spike should do), connect a conducting wire between them, and jam them on opposite ends of a garden bed, or pot.
You just created a battery, and a circuit allowing electrical current to flow (when the soil is sufficiently saturated). I wonder if that would affect root growth patterns?
 

Guzias1

Well-Known Member
i work in the wireless industry.. We have towers blaring signals all across our mountains.. And out mountains are full of green living things.. Routers produce warm dry heat. People probably just toasting the beans and babies
 
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