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how to block anoying cell phone interference

how to block anoying cell phone interference
This instructable will show you how to block that anoying bleeping interference with radios and speakers when your cellphone connets to the mothership or that rare time when someone is actually calling you.

You will need:
2 cell phones (one to test with and one that causes interfernce)
1 9 inch piece of foil (tear off 9 inchs of foil)
a flat surface to fold foil.

Parental Guidance if needed.
 
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Step 1Folding the foil

Folding the foil
Place the 9 inch piece of foil on the table.
Place your phone on top of the foil, near the top edge.

Now fold the foil in the middle by bringing the bottom of the foil over the phone. Meet the two jagged edges together and crease the new bottom edge.

See diagram (fold on red dotted line)
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33 comments
Feb 7, 2011. 8:32 PMhitman1689 says:
so you made an instructable about how to wrap your phone in aluminum foil so that you can't use it? there's an off button for a reason lol
Sep 10, 2009. 9:06 PMualjetmech says:
OK I have one for you guys. I didnt have a cell phone. I live in RURAL area and would still get this sound over the TV, the AM radio, on video cameras, PC speakers, car radio and DVD player~ any explanation for that? Would love to know if the neighbor is trying to listen in with something that would grab cell phone signals? I didnt own a vell phone at the time (about a year ago) ????
Jan 10, 2011. 7:00 PMDoneitmyself says:
Sounds like a bug in the house?
Mar 16, 2009. 5:59 PMcaptain Jack says:
my vote - turn it off.
Jul 10, 2008. 12:44 PMwonderboy says:
I found a site that has a product that stops cellphone speaker buzz problem. It's call www.stopthebuzzin.com. I use them everyday at my desk. No more wacky buzzing noise.
Mar 9, 2009. 3:17 PMdalbyman says:
that material looks a bit like the anti static bag that a hard drive comes in...?
Jul 11, 2008. 2:16 PMwonderboy says:
Yes. I put my pda on what is called the buzz shield and signal is fine. No problems. If I put the phone inside the bag there is a slight degradation of signal. It's amazing.
Jul 13, 2008. 12:48 PMhondagofast says:
My Sony Ericsson K550i pings the tower ever two seconds... my crappy GE speakers buzz incessantly.
Jul 14, 2008. 7:55 AMjtisch says:
I hust turned off the power button on my desktop speakers to eliminate the problem It works. jt
Jun 20, 2008. 11:02 AMTTSDA says:
my phone has a " airplane option " that turns the radio part of the phone of but the phone stays turned on. sorry for my bad English [lol]
Apr 25, 2008. 6:15 PMegreen767 says:
my stupid razr causes tons of electronic stuff to make weird noises. ill be watching tv and suddenly it starts making a bunch of noise. it actually does it randomly, even when im not getting a call. so, this is a good idea.
Feb 29, 2008. 11:23 AMatomicrabbit says:
the only interference with stereo/speaker equipment I've seen with cell phones is when your receive an incoming call. Therefore if you turn the phone off, you will not receive any incoming calls and therefore won't get any interference. GPS will not cause an interference. Also, I'm surprised no one mentioned this, but if you block any signal from your cell phone using foil or faraday cage or anything else that blocks the signal, your cell phone will be trying extra hard to get a signal and therefore drain your battery in a fraction of the time it normally takes for it to drain. So if you leave it in the foil for a long amount of time, you may pull it out just to find out it's dead and need to recharge it.
May 6, 2007. 3:18 AMlabeey says:
easy solution... .WRAP THE SPEAKERS with foil...that way you can still use the cellphone... :)
Nov 6, 2007. 12:55 PMBas says:
That way Professor Xavier can't steal them too.
Sep 9, 2007. 11:55 AMthemasterpyro says:
not being able to use the phone kinda defeats the purpose.
Jul 22, 2007. 2:45 AMcartufer says:
i'd just use an anti static bag like hard drives come in, i had a wireless laptop card come in a nice phone sized one once, 1 layer of anti static bags will not kill reception, 3 or 4 will
May 4, 2007. 2:31 PMWeissensteinburg says:
You could also turn off your phone.
Jul 6, 2007. 4:33 PMeric4435 says:
Thank You! nobody seemed to realize this
Oct 21, 2007. 7:09 PMeric4435 says:
Good point
Jun 4, 2007. 1:07 PMn0ukf says:
Foil wrapping the phone will seriously restrict its ability to make and receive calls (as I see "faraday cage" was mentioned). Your speakers themselves likely aren't catching the signal you're hearing, it's more likely the poorly shielded amplifier (whether in PC speakers, or your home stereo or TV). Speakers are a low impedance device and need a strong signal to reproduce sound (thus the need for an amplifier), you're battery powered cell phone doesn't put out enough power to directly drive the speakers even if it were laying against the coil.
May 7, 2007. 10:16 PMdogsrcool2me says:
"More:

A small wallet sized one may block RFID chips in credit cards/Drivers License

Although I am not condoning illegal activity a larger version can be made to fit a libraray book. It might be enough to block the scanners from reading the RFID tags affixed to library books incase you wanted to take home a reference book."

I already did an instructable on this.
RFID secure wallet
May 16, 2007. 11:07 PMdogsrcool2me says:
I wasn't saying you were.
May 5, 2007. 5:39 AMgmjhowe says:
well, i use my macs built in speakers, and they never seem to interfer, does apple build in some blocking electronic sheilding? cud this be applied to normal speakers?
May 5, 2007. 5:15 AMlemonie says:
I have to agree with Weissensteinburg. I leave my phone within earshot, but far enough away from the PC and stereo.

I once picked up a Taxi radio on my stereo, which freaked me at the time.

L
May 5, 2007. 3:45 AMcarpespasm says:
wouldn't wrapping your phone in a faraday cage also kill it's reception?
May 4, 2007. 10:19 PMgenterara says:
interesting. probably I can now isolate a power source thats inside a speaker.
May 4, 2007. 3:09 PMbeavis2k says:
some phones still transmit signals even when off, usually for localization (gps enabled). Another method is to use the "airplane mode" in the cellphone.
Search for Faraday cage for more info. There is a website that makes a type of fabric for this application lessemf.

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Author:thematthatter(Some Art work)
I am a Military Food Inspector. Eagles Scout. Husband. Dad. Proud owner of two cats.