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- Path: sparky!uunet!psinntp!arrl.org
- From: ehare@arrl.org (Ed Hare KA1CV)
- Newsgroups: sci.electronics
- Subject: Re: SHOCKING STORIES
- Message-ID: <303@arrl.org>
- Date: 21 Jul 92 09:56:47 EDT
- Organization: American Radio Relay League
- Lines: 42
-
- In sci.electronics, feliccia@rodan.acs.syr.edu (Nicholas J Feliccia) writes:
-
- >Ok. I want to know from the net people. What is the largest voltage shock
- >you have ever received (and survived.) I am not talking about rewiring
- >a light switch. I am talking about kissing the flyback transformer.
-
- Nicholas,
-
- Once, when I was about 15, I managed to get across a very stiff (capable
- of >500 mA) 2000 volt d.c. plate supply. I saw stars. Come to think about
- it, I was very luck to see 16.
-
- Higher voltages often send the body into such a convulsion that it throws
- one away from the shock (a hazard in and of itself).
-
- Now, I can't resist -- the flyback is not necessarily all that dangerous!
- In most of the TVs I have seen, the internal resistance of the flyback
- autotransformer windings will limit the current to quite a degree. I
- would be more concerned with the approx 300 volt "low-voltage" end
- at the horizontal output transistors and damping diodes (old timers
- substitute the term "vacuum tube" :-) ).
-
- As someone will certainly point out, it is the current that kills, not the
- voltage. However, this doesn't mean that a 12 volt 1000000 amp supply is
- any more dangerous that a 12 volt 100 mA supply. The current that kills
- it that which actually flows through your body (especially the heart). Body
- resistance typically varies from a few thousand ohms (wet with salt water) to
- a few hundred thousand ohms. Ohm's law still applies. If one had a 1,000 ohm
- body resistance, and got across 12 volts, a current of 12 mA would flow --
- Annoying but not deadly (in most cases).
-
- 73, Ed
-
- -----
- Ed Hare, KA1CV | ehare@arrl.org
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