• @MataVatnikOP
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      414 hours ago

      🥴 I like the way this tickles my brain

  • @RegalPotoo
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    6418 hours ago

    Everything is a wire if the voltage is high enough.

    Every machine is a smoke machine if you use it wrong enough.

    • @veni_vedi_veni
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      14 hours ago

      I was interviewed for a position where lady handed me a pen and asked if it was a conductor.

      I replied: "if the voltage is high enough, yea. She scoffed. Needless to say, I didn’t get the job.

      • @[email protected]
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        1614 hours ago

        Honestly I think you gave the experienced adult answer to what was a high school or even middle school science question.

      • kreekybonez
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        1014 hours ago

        that just sounds like a weird interview.

        “you’re qualified for this position if, and only if, you can answer a useless question with only a rudimentary understanding of the subject and no critical thought”

        if true, you dodged a bullet

    • @ThePyroPython
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      512 hours ago

      Oi! As an engineer I worked damn hard to trap that magic smoke in the machine only for you to let it out and try perfectly good components. Treat your machines with respect, they’re getting smarter by the day and they’re forgetting less and less!

  • @[email protected]
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    2415 hours ago

    Pshaw, even at LV, it’s a lay theory that is, at best, vastly incomplete and, at worst, demonstrably false.

    Electricity will flow through all paths, the most electricity will flow down the path of the least resistance.

    That arc is going up because the plasma is hot and the air is turbulent.

    • @[email protected]
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      1114 hours ago

      Yeah, maybe it needs a Hedberg-ism to get it across to people.

      Electricity takes the path of least resistance. It takes the other paths, but it takes the least resistance path too.

      • @[email protected]
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        26 hours ago

        The problem I have with it is that it gives a false sense of security and how the world works. Most people think lightning rods attract the lightning and direct it into the ground because of this. 1/3 of the world has 220v and 110v connected directly into their showerhead without any idea why they don’t die from it.

  • bitwolf
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    914 hours ago

    Its funny because the arc looks a bit like Louise Belcher laughing maniacally

    • @MataVatnikOP
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      1822 hours ago

      iS iT Up tO cOde??? <— stupidass city council 🙄

  • @[email protected]
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    1 day ago

    This is particularly applicable around downed power cables. Do NOT approach. You don’t need to touch it to become the wire.

    For example: in LA right now

    • @MataVatnikOP
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      991 day ago

      dO nOT toUch the DoWn wIres uuuum I have MY RIGHTS to turn myself into a gas station hotdogs thankyouverymuch

    • Estebiu
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      313 hours ago

      For downed, you mean just a power cable that’s down on the ground but otherwise intact, or he’s only dangerous when cut?

      • @MataVatnikOP
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        12 hours ago

        Any cable that’s not where it’s supposed to be, just stay away 👌 Even if it isn’t visibly cut there could be a short somewhere

    • @EtherWhack
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      3022 hours ago

      You have to keep in mind that the resistance from one foot to your other is going to be less than dry earth between your strides. This means if you are walking toward a downed power line, you may inadvertently walk within its path to its ground and the voltage could actually travel through you.

      https://youtu.be/7BbGzTqTNxc

      • @[email protected]
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        1321 hours ago

        Why is this not knowledge taught in school?

        It is the first time i hear about it and i have never thought of it, yet it makes total sense and could make the difference between life and death in a storm damaged area.

        • @[email protected]
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          917 hours ago

          Well, we did learn exactly that in school and had a practical demonstration at a museum.

          But on a different continent.

        • @dil
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          313 hours ago

          Yeah this should be up there with “stop, drop, and roll”

    • @tibi
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      212 hours ago

      Especially dangerous if it’s a high voltage wire. Even standing close you can become the least resistant path to earth.

    • @rtxn
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      1061 day ago

      Low voltage: “Oh no, there is a tiny spot of corrosion on the contact surface, I think I need to lie down…”

      High voltage: (rips line of coke) “I’M GONNA MAKE MY OWN WIRES WITH BLACKJACK AND HOOKERS!”

    • @[email protected]
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      1920 hours ago

      This is so accurate. Try reading this without knowing what it is. It’s impossible

      Answer

      “Femtanyl” as it’s the artists name

      What about this one?

      Answer

      LITERALLY NOBODY KNOWS 😭😭

  • @[email protected]
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    4623 hours ago

    “it’s current not voltage that kills you”

    High voltage: “Por que no los dos?”

    • @MataVatnikOP
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      High voltage: “hey bestie, how would you like a ✨️new and improved ✨️ nervous system?”

    • @[email protected]
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      416 hours ago

      To be precise, it’s the high amount of heat, electrolysis and other chemical reactions that kill you.

      If you were a prefect conductor, you wouldn’t have a problem.

      • @ThePyroPython
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        512 hours ago

        From the moment I understood the weakness of my flesh, it disgusted me. I craved the strength and certainty of steel. I aspired to the purity of the Blessed Machine. Your kind cling to your flesh, as though it will not decay and fail you. One day the crude biomass you call a temple will wither, and you will beg my kind to save you. But I am already saved, for the Machine is immortal…

      • SkaveRat
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        314 hours ago

        sadly, I never was good in music class and my sense of rhythm is bad

    • @[email protected]
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      1422 hours ago

      I always thought that was a dumb saying because voltage is specifically what allows there to be a lethal current.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 hours ago

        Its the “power” that kills you. Power depends on you as well as voltage.(Your resistance determine the current and time period of current flow also matters)

      • @candybrie
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        921 hours ago

        I think people just don’t understand ohm’s law. They seem to think voltage and current are unrelated to each other.

        • @[email protected]
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          616 hours ago

          Voltage and current are related, of course, but Ohm’s law is just a simplification of circuit theory for static circuits, and the version most are taught early on assume zero inductance and zero capacitance in the circuit. Drop in an alternating current, some capacitors and inductors, and you’ve got yourself a more complex situation, literally, with the scalar real number representing resistance replaced with the complex number representing impedance.

          And when you have time variance that isn’t a simple sinusoidal wave of electric potential coming from a source, even the definition of the word “voltage” starts requiring vector calculus to even be a coherent definition.

          So when I take a simple battery of DC cells to create a low voltage power source, I can still induce current using some transformers and inductors (which store energy in magnetic field) and abruptly breaking open the circuit so that the current still arcs across high resistance air. That’s the basic principle of how a spark plug works. In those cases, you’re creating immense voltages for a tiny amount of time, but there’s never any real risk of significant current being pushed through any part of a person’s body. And as soon as you draw off some of the current, the voltage immediately drops as you deplete the stored energy wherever it is in the system.

          And anything designed to deliver an electric shock to a person (or animal) tends to be high voltage, low current. Tasers, electric fences, etc.

          So it’s current that matters for safety. A high voltage doesn’t always induce a high current. And current can cause problems even at relatively low voltages.

        • @[email protected]
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          821 hours ago

          I suppose it’s half right. Obviously OHMs law is the triangle.

          So you get a high voltage, running through a high resistance, it won’t kill you. The problem is people interpret it in a way that seems to think raising the voltage without raising the resistance is just fine.

          • @candybrie
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            418 hours ago

            It’s kinda hard to raise your body’s resistance a ton outside of not making good contact (e.g. wearing rubber boots/gloves). Things like your skin being moist lower resistance, but I’m not sure it’s really that much of a safety factor when dealing with high voltage.

            • @[email protected]
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              18 hours ago

              I think the general gist is… not as much your body’s resistance as the circuit as a whole. IE a high voltage power source traveling through a high resistance circuit, vs touching the high voltage source directly.

              It’s about the full path the electricity takes (not counting any portion that you may be cutting out if you are giving it a faster path to ground allowing it to bypass some resistance), rather than just the voltage of the source.

              That’s the point that’s trying to be made in that statement, the voltage is indeed a critical part of the equasion. Just not the sole portion of importance.

      • @druidjaidan
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        418 hours ago

        It’s a very dumb saying. If you don’t have the volts you won’t get the amps to kill you that’s ohms law.

        However, there are plenty of harmless high voltage scenarios as well. Situations with high voltage, but no power.

        So really you need both.

    • @Arrkk
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      1322 hours ago

      10kV static discharge and 5kA @ 1mV would like a word.

  • @MehBlah
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    1319 hours ago

    Also High Voltage. This human body will do just fine.

    • @Noodle07
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      1217 hours ago

      slaps head of a man This bad boy can fit so many volts!

    • @PM_Your_Nudes_Please
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      717 hours ago

      “Gee, this squishy skin-sack full of water sure has a lot of tasty electrolytes. Might as well use this as a conductor!”