do you get radio reception in the tunnel?
Someone clearly hasn't taken Physics. You do in fact lose signal in a tunnel and also in elevators depending what the elevator is made out of. According to my physics teacher, he said that going though an tunnel that goes under water shouldn't be a problem because the salt in the water is a good conductor. I wouldn't know cause I don't listen to the radio.
Yes saltwater is a good conductor, but if I saw saltwater in a tunnel I would shit myself. Tell your physics teacher he is wrong and right.
Someone clearly hasn't taken Physics. You do in fact lose signal in a tunnel and also in elevators depending what the elevator is made out of. According to my physics teacher, he said that going though an tunnel that goes under water shouldn't be a problem because the salt in the water is a good conductor. I wouldn't know cause I don't listen to the radio.
Apparently one of their repeaters is broken.
Someone clearly hasn't taken Physics. You do in fact lose signal in a tunnel and also in elevators depending what the elevator is made out of. According to my physics teacher, he said that going though an tunnel that goes under water shouldn't be a problem because the salt in the water is a good conductor. I wouldn't know cause I don't listen to the radio.
I do loose radio signal shortly after I enter the tunnel. I have cell phone reception all the way through from Hampton to norfolk, but on the way back, I always drop my call about 50ft as I enter, but then I have signal the whole way through.
Did you know that the reason you do not get cell phone signal in certain buildlings, like walmart and other large buildings is because of all the metal in the buildings? The metal in the buildings, it acts as a electronic shield... The metal cage effectively creats a Faraday cage around you, not allowing the cell phone signal to get in. That is why you loose signal in some areas of walmart, or elevators and things like that. Too much metal. The more metal, the more the shielding.







