----- Original Message ----- From: Adam Schabtach <adam@...> Is there any truth to the story that 110V is more likely to kill you than really big voltages? No, wives tale. BUT, what is true is that low secondary voltage cause most of the electrocutions statistically. That is because of frequency of contact. While, I do not have any data to give you (nor does it likely exist), I can say that fatality from 120 volts is not the norm from contact. We assume that many 120 volt contacts go unreported. Anyone here ever shock themselves? However, contact with what we call primary voltages (2400 VAC and above) are always reported because someone is going to the hospital. The most common distribution voltage used in the US varies around 13 KV phase to phase and 7500 volts phase to ground. What what I have seen over 28 years of following such things is that well over 50% of contacts are fatal. Those that are not fatal usually result in severe disability (loss of body parts at the entrance and exit points for the current). Severe burns are the normal in all cases. Larry Hendry The story goes that if you bridge a large potential with some part of your body, the physiological reaction is likely to blow you right out of the circuit fairly quickly; whereas if you insert yourself as a conductor of 110V, you'll twitch around a bit but will stay in the circuit long enough for your heart to fibrillate and shut down, your flesh start to cook, etc.? --Adam (who really doesn't like messing with AC, and kept the AC wiring in his cabinet as simple as possible: two wires between the power supply and an integrated switch/fuse/AC power cord receptacle, mounted on the rear. Big wires, nicely shrink-wrapped.) Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
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Re: [motm] Re: Cabinet Power - How to do it.
2002-08-31 by J. Larry Hendry
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