Vic
Elite Member
- Jun 12, 2001
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Originally posted by: LordMorpheus
Originally posted by: Sea Moose
Lets put this into perspective.
240v supply with a kettle with a resistance of say 26ohms
ohms law = V/R=I
Therfore 240volts/26ohms = 9amps
The man in the video.
The human body has a resistance of about 50,000 ohms(this varies from person to person)
The voltage on the site says the main line voltage is either 1.5kv DC or 25kV AC.
We can calculate both figures using ohms law.
1 500volts/50 000ohms = .3amps <--- Thats right, less than one amp.
25 000volts/50 000 = .5amps <--- Also less that one amp.
The interesting thing is his power output
When charcol gary is drawing .3amp his power output is 45watts <--- Comparable to a light globe
When charcol gary is drawing .5amp his power output is 12500watts <--- comparable to an air conditioning unit for a small house.
Take this into account
.001amps to 0.01 = threshold of sensation
.01amp to .1amp = painful shock, cannot let go, muscular paralysis, severe shock, breathing difficultys
0.1amps to 0.2 amps = death
0.2amps to 1.0amp = severe burning.
May i remind all to be careful around electricity please. may i also point out that his arms go rigid.
Assuming his skin was wet due to sweat, you're looking at closer to 3000 Ohms.
So say half an amp of current dissipating 750 Watts of power.
For the system to detect a fault severe enough for it to cycle like that, maybe there is something else at work here? Surely the train draws on the order of several hundred kW to run, so how would half an amp trip the system?
Because it was WAAAYYY past 'severe burning.'
1 horsepower = 746 watts. How many hp do you think it takes to move those trains?