Let's talk about failure
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My family used to have a kitchen sink that was gorunded to the 220v line for the Stove and oven. Yeah. Couldn't hardly go a day without hearing somebody cussing at the sink and stove. lol.
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@dafyre said:
My family used to have a kitchen sink that was gorunded to the 220v line for the Stove and oven. Yeah. Couldn't hardly go a day without hearing somebody cussing at the sink and stove. lol.
Good lord haha that's something I'd actually get off my arse to fix (which is saying something because I'm pretty lazy at home)
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@MattSpeller said:
@mlnews said:
I've taken 20K V across the chest. Let me tell you, everything just goes black.
Obviously not at any significant amperage! That's enough to vaporize flesh and nearly enough to get a lingenfiltgenfusltylsif scar
Yep. only heard of a few people living through that sort of thing. while it's technically the amperage that kills, the more voltage the less resistance (and more amperage) to the skin. and the higher voltage breaks down skin and eventually gives you higher amperage to your insides. This is why amperages above the "let go" point kill as it keeps breaking down your skin until there is less resistance and enough amperage to kill you (which isn't much).
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@MattSpeller said:
@dafyre said:
My family used to have a kitchen sink that was gorunded to the 220v line for the Stove and oven. Yeah. Couldn't hardly go a day without hearing somebody cussing at the sink and stove. lol.
Good lord haha that's something I'd actually get off my arse to fix (which is saying something because I'm pretty lazy at home)
Here is the US code requires plumbing to be grounded if it's conductive so if you got a Hot line on your sink with a normal 15 or 20amp circuit it should trip. Granted a Ground electrode isn't enough alone to trip any breakers (a standard 10ft rod will only draw about 5 amps or less) so it must be connected to the circuit breaker panel.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
@MattSpeller said:
@mlnews said:
I've taken 20K V across the chest. Let me tell you, everything just goes black.
Obviously not at any significant amperage! That's enough to vaporize flesh and nearly enough to get a lingenfiltgenfusltylsif scar
Yep. only heard of a few people living through that sort of thing. while it's technically the amperage that kills, the more voltage the less resistance (and more amperage) to the skin. and the higher voltage breaks down skin and eventually gives you higher amperage to your insides. This is why amperages above the "let go" point kill as it keeps breaking down your skin until there is less resistance and enough amperage to kill you (which isn't much).
Yeah, it was way more than enough to kill and I've seen my dad get hit by the same system except his was limited by going through the air (the thing arced and got him from several feet away - the danger in a high voltage system.) But the limiter on it limits the amperage to almost nothing the instant that a significant load is put on the system - like when it tries to kill me. So, in theory, it is designed to stop a heart but not to burn you up.
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@scottalanmiller said:
I found out that my wife takes full wall voltage a few times a week. Apparently she is so clumsy with the wall plugs that this is a normal thing. I can't remember having that happen to me since I was five!
Is that 110v?
We have switches on our wall sockets to isolate the socket. Saves a whole lotta zap
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My coffee grinder holds a bit of charge in it, so even after switching it off at the wall and unplugging it, I have had the active and neutral prongs brush past my arm, I received a small tingle. Now I hold the power button in for a few seconds after unplugging it. -
Yes, 110 in the US. Hopefully she doesn't do the same thing here in Europe with 230V. Thankfully European plugs are safe. American ones practically force you to touch the prongs.
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@scottalanmiller said:
Yes, 110 in the US. Hopefully she doesn't do the same thing here in Europe with 230V. Thankfully European plugs are safe. American ones practically force you to touch the prongs.
It's 120v most people call it 110v for some reason. But most homes are 240v split phase and most things aside from dryer's, stove's furance's, welders, etc. run off a single 120v phase.
240v gives you more power with less amperage.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
It's 120v most people call it 110v for some reason.
Because historically 110 was used a lot prior to the national 120 standard.
Related: most of the rest of the world has standardized on 230V.
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@JaredBusch said:
Related: most of the rest of the world has standardized on 230V.
One of the instances where "thinking of the children" got us wimpy results.
I want 230v/20a circuits as standard
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@JaredBusch said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
It's 120v most people call it 110v for some reason.
Because historically 110 was used a lot prior to the national 120 standard.
Related: most of the rest of the world has standardized on 230V.
Yeah but that's been a very long time. That hasn't been since people only used lighting in their house. and it was even originally 100v then moved to 110v. That was long before the time of multiple phase distribution.