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Can a Factory built microwave oven have microwave leakage?

Try watching the news from Ukraine, or read any history books about WWI or WWII.
I have been, only see one unverified report of a Russian soldier claiming that he was sent to the line with a shovel. Since I haven't seen a verified report and you made the claim about Russians, the ball is in your court. Take a swing.
 
The transmitter detector circuit with 1 LED now has a diode. I tested it on my 65KHz induction heater it works. I tested both detector circuits on our kitchen microwave oven the LEDs do not light up there are no leaks. Both detectors work good with no diode in series with the LED. I'm not sure this proves anything.

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A test at 65KHz proves nothing about working at 2.4GHz.
 
Yes all microwave ovens leak but they must be below the safety agency power density at a certain distance.
Initial designs were cautioned against users with pacemakers until they learned how to shield their designs better.

I have an e-field meter to prove it if you want data. But the LED is a good tool with a ferrite coil. The Faraday cage is pretty good too but not nearly as good as a Lingren EMI 2-stage copper gazebo cage rated > -120 dB that can block all radio signals below a threshold.


Considering that a 65 mW LED at a rated current of 20 mA when dim they only draw < 10% of this power so it is more or the same as your Wifi Router antenna. (don't stare at it in close range for along time to prevent glaucoma and cataracts. )
 
Where I used to work, the microwave had a problem. We put it on a work bench with a fluorescent light about 4' above it. We took the cover off and hit the power switch to see what we could determine.

When the fluorescent light lit up, we decided that was enough of that! Turned out the door switch was gummed up.
 
Where I used to work, the microwave had a problem. We put it on a work bench with a fluorescent light about 4' above it. We took the cover off and hit the power switch to see what we could determine.

When the fluorescent light lit up, we decided that was enough of that! Turned out the door switch was gummed up.

That doesn't prove anything either - and there are three door switches, including a crowbar one which blows the fuse if the others fail.
 
That doesn't prove anything either - and there are three door switches, including a crowbar one which blows the fuse if the others fail.
I would say it suggests plenty of RF radiation.
 
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5 mW/cm FSD is about 10% brightness of a 5 mm 65 mW LED with a 1cm diam ferrite coil proving LED's can be useful if calibrated like this meter was for peak power(?) but that is 500 mW/m right? NO "near field" is not linear farther than multiple wavelengths and is inverse squared lower.
 
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That doesn't prove anything either - and there are three door switches, including a crowbar one which blows the fuse if the others fail.

The light intensity is somewhat linear to current for FL tubes which for high impedance is proportional to voltage and thus e-field in V/m so if you had a diode to detect the intensity ratio to maximum and measure the meter length of the tube, you can easily measure the e-field and probably find that old 40W tube was running dim enough to see but not bright enough to blind you after decades of use from cataracts.

The canary in the mineshaft is bloodshot eyes. At high energy levels it is fainting.
 
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