Digit":nh5tcs2c said:
I would have made that point if you hadn't Craig.
Err, but you didn't. Instead you provided a statement without caveat or context. Anyhoo ...
OK, I'm happy to accept your personal experience and retract the "regardless of the source of the flickering" part of my post. However I maintain that shadow flicker from a wind turbine is highly unlikely to induce an epileptic seizure. For this to happen:
- it needs to be windy (not uncommon)
- it needs to be sunny (rare in the UK!!)
- somebody with photosensitive epilepsy need to be close enough to the turbine to be in the shadow of the blades (typically within 10x the rotor length of the base i.e. very close)
- the turbine needs to be rotating fast enough to generate flicker that is in the range of the observers photosensitive range (highly unlikely given the design parameters stated above)
- if the point above is not met, then the observer needs to be in the shadow created by >1 turbine. This is usually not allowed by planning regulations as flicker is an annoyance to everybody,m not just epileptics!
- more than 25% of the visual cortex needs to be stimulated (i.e. a large part of the field of vision needs to be effected)
... and this is before you take into consideration background illumination, background contrast, wavelength of light that effects the particular person etc etc.
Unlike reflective flicker, somebody with a diagnosed condition would have to deliberately get within close range of a turbine, stay there for long enough to be effected, and do nothing to remove themselves before it starts to effect them.
To the best of my knowledge, there is currently no UK or US shadow flicker standard. There may be a European one now, but this is very recent. I wasn't able to find it using google for a few minutes, but some reports made mention of it. If this was a major issue, why are there no standards?
Can you find any evidence of a single person who has had a seizure caused by shadow flicker from a wind turbine? And by this I mean real evidence as opposed to pseudo-science leaflets claiming that there is a risk - yes I've already agreed there is a risk, but there is a risk that my house will get hit by a meteor this weekend. That is also unlikely! Unlike some people, I am very open to the possibility that I am totally wrong, and I will consider all inputs in an unbiased manner, but so far, there is precious little evidence to support this.
Cheers Craig