rijndael
Silver $$ Contributor
Are any of you following the baseball and tennis players who are getting brain cancer, which could be linked to their sports and the use of radar to track ball velocity?
www.odwyerpr.com
www.foxnews.com
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
I admit, I don't know much about the tech as it relates to ballistic chronographs, but it makes me wonder about it as the radar units are usually not far from the shooter's head. Yes, I realize that the beam is pointed down range, but this cancer phenomenon also impacts radar technicians ... and they're generally not having it pointed at them.
PR News | NYT Mystified at Brain Cancer in Baseball Players; Others Arent - Tue., Aug. 15, 2017
Baseball players, especially catchers and pitchers, get brain cancer; Darren Daulton

Brain cancer deaths of six former Phillies players must be investigated, says Dr. Siegel
Fox News Medical contributor Dr. Marc Siegel called for an investigation into the suspicious deaths of the six former Phillies players who died from brain cancer.

Cluster of testicular cancer in police officers exposed to hand-held radar - PubMed
<p>Within a cohort of 340 police officers, six incident cases of testicular cancer occurred between 1979 and 1991 (O/E 6.9; p < 0.001, Poisson distribution). Occupational use of hand-held radar was the only shared risk factor among all six officers, and all routinely held the radar gun directly...

I admit, I don't know much about the tech as it relates to ballistic chronographs, but it makes me wonder about it as the radar units are usually not far from the shooter's head. Yes, I realize that the beam is pointed down range, but this cancer phenomenon also impacts radar technicians ... and they're generally not having it pointed at them.
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