this is the second time someone has tried giving me electrical advice on here, like i'm on an electrical forum. i don't need your electrical advice. especially when it's wrong. do you know what it takes to kill a human being? 45mA for a female, and roughly 75mA for a male. that's the amount of current flow (not voltage) that it takes to over-ride your nervous system and perform a muscle contraction that will cause you to grab ahold of and ensure you keep hold of the circuit (if you were so dumb to allow it to happen) granted, the likelihood of that happening on a power-limited 10,000v ignition transformer is NEAR IMPOSSIBLE. as if it weren't already a power-limited circuit, and somehow the voltage were high enough to induce enough current through your semi-resistor of a body, it would blow you off of the circuit. the only thing you would have to worry about would be the thermal burns, not the grip of the electrical circuit. 336w is not going to give you instantaneous thermal burns. it will turn your arm numb for a half-day or so, and will not be good on your nervous system, but will not make you "dead."
this is why the UL GFCI threshold on most GFI breakers is set at 30mA and a GFI receptacle is somewhere around 4-6mA. do you know what AMPERAGE that 10,000v transformer is producing? let's do the math using ohm's law... 120v * 2.8a = 336w. 336w / 10,000v 33.6mA.
i'd suggest sticking to refining advice. i'll do the electrical. it's why i'm a master electrician.
you didn't think my screen-name meant something else, did you?
Good to know
you are 'knowledgeable' on electricity. F.y.i.: I'm a graduated electrician and instrumentation technician and a certified safety officer. I don't just warn you but other members as well, who might not know about the dangers.
The mA you are referring to are Amperages through the hart area, that's why earth fault detection is set at that amperage, to keep it at a safe minimum.
Some people have survived lightning strikes.
This is something different that the let-go limit of your muscles you are referring to.
then you have 50VAC or 110VDC, which is considered the safe voltage threshold for humans as the current caused by this voltage and the human resistance can not cause damage.
As a lot of people misunderstand electricity, the tend to believe "facts" that are just not that.
Better safe than sorry (dead or severely injured members). If you still disagree, why not make a video of you holding a Jacobs ladder while in operation.
I don't think too much about nick-names or avatar pictures. We've had cheap dating site pic's or escort service like pictures on here, asking chemical questions. Some folks are weird.
Per the bold print, family and friends of people who died from getting shocked, that could not help it or prevent it may take offense in your statements.
You can't know something you never learned...