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E.m.p attack- Can data & home computers survive? |
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| Apr29-10, 06:04 AM | #1 |
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E.m.p attack- Can data & home computers survive?
Is it just the electronics devices like notebooks, PC's that are rendered useless or as well the actual storage mediums like flash memory & optical discs even when there stored away?
Would data on usb external HDD, flash memory, & dvd optical storage be readable after the attack? What home methods can keep these storage devices safe? Do the devices (usb flash & say notebook) have to be connected to power in order to be affected by the emp? Would wrapping devices in alot of tin foil & storing them in a safe be enough? I'm not getting ready for ww3, but I'm pretty curious. |
| Apr29-10, 07:16 AM | #2 |
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Mentor
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Certainly CDs would survive...but I'm curious about flash and hard drives too...
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| Apr29-10, 08:04 AM | #3 |
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Just construct a Faraday box for your flash drives, a Faraday cage for your computer room, and in conjunction with reinforced concrete that should provide enough EMP protection. I'd be worried about air filtration and water purification systems if I was you.
Naturally an underground bunker addresses all these issues. If you consider the cost, the quality of life after a nuclear blast, and the overall damage to infrastructure, looting, and zombie Brooklynites, I'd just invest in a HAM rig, pactor modems, long lasting batteries and put them all in that Faraday cage. |
| Apr29-10, 11:08 AM | #4 |
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E.m.p attack- Can data & home computers survive?
I would like to make a small one that shields a notebook, just for fun.
How thick or heavy duty does the ground wire have to be? Would a long 10-12awg wire be enough? Couldn't I just use a copper pipe? And have it deep into the ground? As for brass mesh, wouldn't the emp still get through the holes in the mesh? cheers. |
| May2-10, 06:14 AM | #5 |
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I got more info from a few non science forums on how to build a FC
But for a small box that you can hold easy, would it stll need a ground wire? Or does all the electricity just go away in the air? |
| May2-10, 06:30 AM | #6 |
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Dav333, you don't need to ground a Faraday cage. A Faraday cage is a conducting box.
cronxeh, I'm not sure I know how this works. Blocking a pulse EMF requires a rapid rearrangement of charge in the cage. Resistance impedes charge rearrangement. Also, conduction alone doesn't block magnetic fields. Is this an issue? |
| May2-10, 09:04 AM | #7 |
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Would storing devices in a car & microwave work?
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| May2-10, 09:26 AM | #8 |
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| May3-10, 02:04 PM | #9 |
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Just curious, would a device housed in rubber block out the electricity? Or some of it?
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