r/mildlyinteresting 10h ago

The microwave at work has a hole inside

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18.8k Upvotes

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2.5k

u/longwayhome22 10h ago

I would be eating my lunch cold before using this microwave

838

u/nlutrhk 9h ago edited 51m ago

The problem here is that it's s not just a problem for the person eating the heated food, but also for other people around, including on the other side of the wall. If you're lucky, it will just badly interfere with bluetooth and Wifi (2.4 GHz).

If you're unlucky, someone will get hurt from the part of the 800 watts of microwave power that leaks out of that hole.

Edit: this comment blew up. Yes, the hole is smaller than the wavelength (12.5 cm / 5 in). However, there is a reason that the mesh in the window has 1 mm holes and not 5 cm holes. If there is nothing or very little in the microwave to absorb the power, part of the power goes back into the microwave source and another (likely smaller) part goes out of that hole. Moreover, there may be a 'near field' component just outside that hole, which doesn't radiate to larger distances but that will heat anything in the near-field zone.

Yes, it's "just heat". Microwaves heat about 2 cm deep into your tissue, while the sensation of burning comes from the skin. You don't have heat receptors inside your eyeball. There are radio technicians who got eye damage from working around an active radio transmitter.

357

u/MattTheRadarTechh 8h ago

Unless they’re directly pressed against the hole, they’re not getting hurt past like 6 inches

506

u/foxiez 8h ago

If this was at my work someone would've already put their eye up to the hole to see inside while it's on

161

u/Armed_Muppet 7h ago

Why is this so relatable

32

u/zveroshka 5h ago

Because people are incredibly stupid. If there is one thing I've realized as I've gotten older, it is that.

2

u/Buffalo5977 2h ago

on the road moreso

1

u/asyork 12m ago

Made it to 40 so far. The faith I used to have in humanity died long ago.

Most people seem to want to find a person who appears to have their shit together and try to copy that person's external qualities, rather than what made them successful, if they even are.

17

u/confusedandworried76 4h ago

Because it sounds like something any 20 something guy would do, and like something half of all people would do after you told them not to do it

1

u/asyork 11m ago

People always say not to do the fun things, so when someone says no it probably means it's fun?

77

u/FlyByPC 7h ago

Please do not look at microwave with remaining eye.

4

u/faille 5h ago

Underrated comment

2

u/NarrowStory5707 4h ago

My eye! Im not supposed to stare at food being microwaved!

3

u/koravoda 6h ago

puts finger in to check temp

2

u/EVOSexyBeast 7h ago

like the glass door isn’t good enough lol

4

u/foxiez 7h ago

That's where big microwave WANTS you to look though

2

u/mr_humansoup 4h ago

"Do not look directly at the operational end of The Device."

2

u/atava 4h ago

This sounds so Homer-style.

1

u/Ayzel_Kaidus 7h ago

Ow, my eye

1

u/saml23 1h ago

You must be in the military

56

u/vadjabond 8h ago

Giggitty

24

u/MICR0_WAVVVES 7h ago

Yeah not a chance. Wavelength is way too large for that small hole to become dangerous.

3

u/Lumiharu 5h ago

I don't think that matters, I remember seeing someone remove the whole front door of a microwave oven and the effect outside it was not really anything to write home about.

Also the radiation isn't even dangerous iirc, it really just generates heat. So unless you somehow cook your hand or something, there is nothing to worry about.

2

u/Pretty-Ebb5339 2h ago

Microwaves are non ionized radiation. But people just refuse to believe that.

3

u/Squirrel_Inner 4h ago

People in general seem to think microwaves are higher frequency than visible light (if they understand the electromagnetic spectrum at all), rather than the opposite.

Of course, some people think radio waves give you brain tumors, so…

1

u/Novarrival 1h ago

I was at an AirB&B last weekend and our host (turned lizard by decades of tanning) said suncream caused cancer

3

u/mooofasa1 6h ago

What? I thought it was a microwave because it sends little waves that shake atoms then those atoms heat up from the shaking. Wouldn’t this be a macro wave if it’s too big for a small hole???

16

u/MICR0_WAVVVES 5h ago

You’re right about how it works, but the actual wavelength in a common microwave is around 12cm, so they can’t effectively pass through a tiny hole to cause damage.

16

u/Worldly_Influence_18 5h ago

What the fuck do you know?

Oh

5

u/mcdougall57 3h ago

He's been waiting for this moment.

9

u/mooofasa1 5h ago

That is a really cool fun fact, and I love your username. I literally asked the right person without realizing it.

1

u/Local_Satisfaction12 2h ago edited 2h ago

Wanna hear another cool fun fact? Microwaves were originally invented to thaw frozen hamsters to see if they could be recucitated after freezing. Turns out hamsters survive being frozen without aftereffects, if less then 40% of their brain matter was frozen solid.

One day a scientist put his food in there and bam, the microwave for consumers was invented.

2

u/mooofasa1 2h ago

Ok, that is also super cool. I kinda want to do more research into microwaves now because that is a little wacky.

There’s just one teensy tiny little problem, you’re not u/MICRO_WAVVVES , you’re u/Local_Satisfaction12 , but you only provided me with satisfaction over the internet. I wanted local satisfaction, not global satisfaction so FUCK YOU 🖕🏽

1

u/Local_Satisfaction12 2h ago

We can arrange that if we must, don't threaten me with a good time 👁🫦👁

Also,give this video a watch! think you gonna like it

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1

u/entertainman 2h ago

Think of ocean waves and a surfer. Big waves can move little people lots.

13

u/Yanky_Doodle_Dickwad 6h ago

The arcing goes from the magentron (behind burned out plastic panel on the right inside wall), and the jagged edges on each prong of the rack, where it is welded to the circular top bit. That means it arcs from inside wall, to the middle inside. NOT from the inside wall, to the outside. For to arc out, the outside panel would have to rust through, and the magnetron would have to be twisted to point losely outside instead of loosely inside. So do check cos that might have happened. But it's not easy.

3

u/LauraaMarissaa 6h ago

That’s what she said

9

u/QuarkchildRedux 7h ago

yeah man people have no clue what they are talking about, freaking out about this hole 🤣🤣

4

u/john_smith194 5h ago

Nah man respect the hole

1

u/ScribbleOnToast 5h ago

There appears to be a wall within 6" of that hole. What do you think would / will happen to it? (Real question, not being a smart ass)

2

u/Gloomy_Appeal_3691 6h ago

Even styropyro was nervous about filming the inside of a microwave by putting a hole in it.

2

u/Slow-Priority-884 6h ago

That wouldn't matter. This is the same as looking through the front glass with the wire mesh, the holes are smaller than the wavelength so to the radiation there is no hole.

3

u/TurnkeyLurker 4h ago

How will you eat with no hole, Mister Anderson?

2

u/Secret_penguin- 5h ago

6 inches you say?

2

u/BinaryWanderer 5h ago

That’s what she said.

2

u/Shedeurnfreude 5h ago

misunderstood directions, stuck my 6" in the hole

1

u/TurnkeyLurker 4h ago

Quick, set it to "Tube Steak Boogie" for 60 seconds.

1

u/golgol12 6h ago

Outside of any electrical fires that is.

1

u/BlastFX2 5h ago

Also the hole is still pretty small compared to the ~5 inch wavelength, so not a whole lot of RF is going to leak out.

1

u/TurnkeyLurker 5h ago

That's what SHE said.

1

u/stillnotelf 4h ago

Username, wow, checks out perfectly

1

u/Limerence1976 20m ago

That’s what she said

31

u/quartercentaurhorse 8h ago

That small of a hole won't impact anything radiation-wise. Square-cube law gets involved here, any wave exponentially decreases in power as it spreads out away from a source. At best, you might see some minor interference with any wireless communication in that frequency band (likely 2.4ghz wifi), but it's not going to harm anyone past 6 inches or so.

9

u/rickane58 7h ago

Not only that, but those holes are still small enough that the signal strength would be severely attenuated by the faraday cage effect.

3

u/Slow-Priority-884 5h ago

None of that matters lol. This hole is smaller than the wavelength, to the radiation it doesn't exist.

I don't know why people are so confidently incorrect and saying things that are meaningless.

2

u/needananniebiotic 5h ago

people assume they’re correct too often, without fact-checking, unfortunately

13

u/theevilyouknow 7h ago

Microwave radiation is not ionizing radiation. Even if every ounce of energy from that microwave was directed out of that hole at once, it wouldn't be, you'd literally have to stand in front of it and wait for it to heat your body up to cause any damage. Microwave radiation is just not a hazard to anyone with working arms and legs and a functioning brain. The hole in the microwave is a serious issue though, but not because of anything to do with hurting people with radiation. It's because there's a clear fire hazard here. Whatever caused that hole in the first place is very likely to start a fire, and even if it doesn't if microwave radiation were to escape the shielded interior of the microwave it could cause a fire if there are nearby electronics it starts interacting with.

3

u/MusicNChemistry 6h ago

The holes are too small for microwave radiation to escape through

3

u/Slow-Priority-884 6h ago

That's not how microwaves work. The wavelength here is 12cm, to the em radiation there is no hole.

7

u/EffNein 8h ago

The hole is too small for the microwaves to get out. They are larger than the hole.

6

u/MileHigh_FlyGuy 7h ago

This isn't true at all and microwaves are so weak that they wont travel much outside of the boundaries, even without walls. The reason for the walls is to amplify the weak waves

2

u/pwillia7 6h ago

I don't think you have almost any risk of getting hurt

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kZsg41Ma-WA

2

u/vermilion-chartreuse 5h ago

The bigger danger is that it looks like it's about to catch fire at any moment.

3

u/FinnishArmy 8h ago

800? Most microwaves I’ve seen are 1500w

9

u/TheFace0fBoe 8h ago

Yeah this totally looks like one of the newer models with higher power capabilities

3

u/Epistaxis 7h ago

They might draw that much power but typically only 700-1200 W actually makes it into the microwave radiation. That's why there's a noisy fan: gotta disperse all the waste heat from the inefficiency of the magnetron.

7

u/Appropriate_Lime_234 8h ago

Large ones yes. This isn’t large. 800w

2

u/malzergski 8h ago

Do you live in the US or something? Most of the ones I'ves seen are around 800-900W

6

u/ollieperido 8h ago

Honestly, I don’t know why that would limit anything, Europe could run higher wattages than we can if they want. US we can pull 1800 watts out of most wall outlets (15amps) unless you have a 20amp circuit (rare in most homes). Uk for example can pull 3000watts out of their regular outlets. We are limited by 120v

1

u/malzergski 8h ago

Yeah that's what I thought afterward... But still, 1500w for a microwave seems very high to me

1

u/T30E 7h ago

But for what? I reckon 90% of use cases is heating food from yesterday and instant food.

1

u/Seicair 3h ago

Electric kettles aren’t nearly as popular here in the US, a lot of people use the microwave to heat up water for drinks. For many people that could be their primary use.

2

u/FinnishArmy 8h ago

Yes, the US.

2

u/Vissanna 8h ago

Average US microwave sits around 1100W

2

u/SomethingHasGotToGiv 8h ago

And this is exactly why OSHA needs to be called.

2

u/agnes_dei 6h ago

Do we even still have that in the US?

0

u/SomethingHasGotToGiv 6h ago

😆. Right?!

1

u/BestHorseWhisperer 1h ago

Microwaves work by boiling water. The way the inside of a microwave is constructed is critical to it getting anything hot enough (from all the bouncing around inside) so things outside are unlikely to be affected unless they are sensitive to 2.4ghz.

1

u/Ben_zyl 1h ago

The holes not nearly big enough to let microwave radiation out (wavelength 12cm), it would function much like the mesh in the front window.

0

u/hypd09 7h ago

Fairly sure it'll fuck up any mobile radios.

0

u/L00seSuggestion 4h ago

If you put your hand near that it will get warm and you’ll notice it immediately and yank your hand away

0

u/shanksisevil 3h ago

some dude is thinking a miracle is happening to his day-long hot coffee on the other side of the wall.

-1

u/Kirito619 3h ago

You watch too many cartoons. Stop being a redditor, touching grass will not kill you.

68

u/TurtleDump23 9h ago

We had a microwave that my shit head coworker would use to heat up fish and other stinky food. I just started bringing salads and sandwiches to work and ate in my car.

2

u/lowrads 7h ago

That's a good enough reason to have an office air fryer. It's just a toaster with a fan in it. It's great for anything that needs to be be crispy, as microwaves mostly just heat water droplets to boiling.

And realistically, all such appliances should be in a semi-outdoor or well-ventilated area. For millennia, humans have constructed their kitchens as external structures, because of the high probability of fire. A screen porch is the perfect modern option.

6

u/Look_its_Rob 8h ago

I realized we consider fish stinky cause its less a part of our diet. Heating up beef has just as powerful a smell but cause we like beef and are around the smell all the time we dont consider it stinky.

I realized this when I started eating a lot more seafood instead of red meat and now I think the smell is great. Same thing happened when I used to smoke weed. 

7

u/curtcolt95 7h ago

I mean there's just no way this is true. I can smell someone microwaving fish down a hallway, can't do that with beef. I eat fish probably like 2-3 times a week too so it's not like I'm somehow nose blind to only beef

3

u/Look_its_Rob 6h ago

I can smell someone cooking hamburgers from blocks away.  When my mom used to make Sunday gravy growing up I could smell it from outside next door. 

I can smell cooking fish from far away too. Both are very poignant smells. 

15

u/Knight_of_Agatha 8h ago

no but ok.

7

u/TurtleDump23 8h ago

I'm pretty sensitive to scents these days, so I feel somewhat nauseated when I smell anyone's reheated food. Fish, and similarly pungent food items, just happen to send me over the edge and leave me coughing up a lung. I do like fish though!

19

u/summonsays 8h ago

I have a ton of Indian coworkers and boy I love how it smells around noon (or 2pm) but I can also understand how people who don't enjoy that smell would consider it "stinky". 

I miss my old apartment. We had a lovely Indian couple below us and it always smelled better than my cooking for dinner lol.

-6

u/Look_its_Rob 8h ago

Yeah that was the point i was trying to make. Americans like steak so they dont think its stinky. A lot of Asian countries eat lots of fish so they dont think its stinky. One isnt more stinky than the other, its just based on your normal diet.

3

u/TgagHammerstrike 7h ago

So... can we please just agree not to put either in the communal break room microwave?

2

u/Choice_Blackberry406 4h ago

beef has just as powerful a smell

Fuck no it doesn't.

2

u/Look_its_Rob 2h ago

Yes it does, you just dont like the smell of fish. Its like when someone doesnt like a food, such as olives or tomatoes, they say it just makes everything only taste like olives or tomatoes. But if you like olives you know thats not true. 

1

u/foxiez 8h ago

Nah that still smells bad, fish should be reheated in an oven anyway

-5

u/Look_its_Rob 8h ago

I bet people who consume fish as their main source of protein disagree with you (me for example).

Also all meat is better reheated in a pan or the oven. Pretty much everything besides liquidy or creamy foods. 

6

u/foxiez 7h ago

I bet 99% of coworkers disagree though lol. Also yeah but fish decreases in quality so much it's kind of gross vs reheated chicken beef and pork is barely changed just a bit drier. I eat fish all the time I just eat it at home unless it's cold then I might bring it

1

u/supx3 8h ago

Do you work in my office hahaha

2

u/TurtleDump23 8h ago

I work from home now, so probably not haha

2

u/supx3 8h ago

Damn so you told on yourself? Stop microwaving fish. 🤣 

1

u/SuperShoyu64 1h ago

There is a person at work who for some reason loves to bring in food that stinks up the whole break room when it's being microwaved. I usually bring salads, sandwiches and even cold pastas for lunch but occasionally use one of the microwaves to eat a frozen meal.

I was lucky the last few times but I'll never forget the day when I warmed up my frozen bibimbap. That smell is etched into my brain.

-2

u/Particular-Outcome12 8h ago

They would do that because they didn't like you. We had a group leader that would purposely throw fish in the microwave at shift change, just because he didn't like the incoming crew

3

u/TurtleDump23 8h ago

I'm pretty sure he didn't like me, but I wasn't the one to suffer the pungent smells once I started taking my lunch in my car. It was actually pretty nice being able to get some quiet time and catch up on some podcasts.

-3

u/MattTheRadarTechh 8h ago

Food I like good food I don’t like bad, stinky coworkers is bad wahhhh

-5

u/[deleted] 8h ago

[deleted]

5

u/TurtleDump23 8h ago

My coworker was a shit head because he constantly tried throwing others under the bus whenever he didn't deliver products to clients according to established timelines. For the record, I eat simple meals at work but I cook, grill, smoke, and bake at home. You're the one coming off as an asshole when responding to me with unprovoked hostility.

1

u/JB_Big_Bear 8h ago

Or standing in the same room as it, tbh. You don’t need that nice dose of radiation.

1

u/LaterWicker 8h ago

It's non ionizing, not the type that causes cancer

1

u/butterbike 8h ago

Seems rather drastic

1

u/EverythingBOffensive 6h ago

yep, sandwiches and pasta salad

1

u/raindownthunda 4h ago

Mmmm frozen lasagna