- Jan 14, 2013
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This happened in the UK. I know nothing about electricity but it would seem the juice coming through the charging cable for a phone would not be enough to kill you. But this is in the UK where the juice is stronger than the US. I wonder what would happen here/
I'm not stupid enough to try it. Nothing charging is getting in with me into a body of water.
https://www.cnet.com/news/man-dies-after-charging-iphone-in-bath-electrocution/
"Richard Bull was found dead in the bathtub.
His wife found him with severe burns to his body at their home in London.
As the Daily Mail reports, when police arrived at the scene they found an extension cord leading into the bathroom from the hallway.
"We found an iPhone plugged into the extension cable and then the charger element in the bath," PC Craig Pattinson told an inquiry into Bull's death.
He added: "The extension cable was on the floor and it appeared as though he had his phone charger on his chest and the part between the phone charger and the cable had made contact with the water."
The inquest concluded that 32-year-old Bull's death was caused accidental electrocution. However, the coroner, a public official who investigates suspicious, sudden or violent deaths, said he was extremely concerned that people didn't realize that phones were as dangerous near water as, say, hairdryers."
I'm not stupid enough to try it. Nothing charging is getting in with me into a body of water.
https://www.cnet.com/news/man-dies-after-charging-iphone-in-bath-electrocution/
"Richard Bull was found dead in the bathtub.
His wife found him with severe burns to his body at their home in London.
As the Daily Mail reports, when police arrived at the scene they found an extension cord leading into the bathroom from the hallway.
"We found an iPhone plugged into the extension cable and then the charger element in the bath," PC Craig Pattinson told an inquiry into Bull's death.
He added: "The extension cable was on the floor and it appeared as though he had his phone charger on his chest and the part between the phone charger and the cable had made contact with the water."
The inquest concluded that 32-year-old Bull's death was caused accidental electrocution. However, the coroner, a public official who investigates suspicious, sudden or violent deaths, said he was extremely concerned that people didn't realize that phones were as dangerous near water as, say, hairdryers."
would tell one that a spinning or rotating sharp blade is something one shouldn't touch whilst it is spinning or rotating.