Mobile phones produce a LOT of radio waves that get convetered back in to electrical power the amp stage of the your radio,TV or what ever thinks its a signal and puts it to the speakers whith make the beaping sound
Shure an E-Bomb and you will fry all electronics miles around! :twisted: (A joke)
You can try to transmit your voice whith an mini FM transmiter over the station your neigbur is listening to.So insted of the radio station he will hear you on the radio.(If he is listening to CDs or tapes this wont work)
To do it the same way an mobile phone dose you wod neead an realy big radio transmiter that wod get you in a LOT of truble
The fool prof way: Go there whith an 10kg hamer and smah the crap out of his radio.
I wouldn't have thought so, and doing so would render you liable to presecution, rather than your neighbour!.
Have you tried reporting him?, recent legislation means they can be evicted for causing a noise problem - in fact we lost one of our Ju Jitsu students last week, his family was thrown out of their home for being too noisey!.
Ive been over loads of times, he's just not from this planet i think heh!
Just wanted to hook up something simple to annoy him, considering his speaker is so close to my wall. He's playing a CD so the transmitting over it wont work. There must be something i could rig up just to mess with him a little.. any ideas??
If the stereo is rely close to the wall. and your on the other side and the walls are thin you cod call a free number on your cell phone and put it on the wall.
ahh cool. Well once i was using my hand crank dynamo next to it and i think it affected it, i heard crackling. Thought i could rig up something like that, drive it with a motor perhaps.
Modern cell phones output something like 4W to 5W, but their design turns the power down in a strong signal area, so they only output the minimum amount of power required to work.
This is for a couple of main reasons, firstly to reduce battery consumption, secondly to reduce damage to your brain as you have it stuck right next to your ear :lol:
Heh heh. Seems random but isn't. I rechecked that figure and it was a minimum output for a voice-data phone instead of the max. 'Didn't seem like like 8.25mW could the job even with strong cell receivers. So what exactly is being transmitted in these bursts you can hear through the stereo? The SCM I keep reading about?