I agree the fact is our government could easily use equipment to detect any sort of sound wave weapon. The problem though, is bureaucracy First someone has to ask for it. The diplomat corp is not a high priority though,.. Then they have to make specifications, then bids. After ten years they will have a non working model that needs a least ten more million to get it working..And then find out it cannot reach the actual frequencies involved, Since no diplomats had any clue what it was anyway. So then they contract to modify the equipment for another $30,000,000By this time..... You get the picture. There is no 'guy' who can just go there, set up his own stuff and find out
Audio as a weapon
I would like to deviate a bit from the normal audio equipment conversation and delve into the phenomenon of the recent audio "weapon" that appears to have been deployed in Cuba upon State Department employees and now, it appears, in China. I know that very low frequency can be dreadful to listen to but anyone out there have any ideas with regard to how audio could be used as a weapon? It is not my intention to draw speculation of a political nature, I am only interested in the technical aspect of audio as a "weapon". Anyone have any thoughts?
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- 59 posts total
- 59 posts total

