• @bobs_monkey@lemmy.zip
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    34820 days ago

    Electrician here, I’ve certainly felt electricity, and it sure ain’t pleasant.

    And those generation alternators must be very confused.

    • @hOrni@lemmy.world
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      8320 days ago

      As a non-electrician, I’ve also felt electricity and can confirm, it is indeed not pleasant.

      • @xylol@leminal.space
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        1420 days ago

        You only felt what electricity did to you, not what electricity feels, it probably feels like Rogue from Xmen where when it touches someone it hurts them so it will not be able to experience love so its sad and angry

        • @psud@aussie.zone
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          15 days ago

          Have you never been charged to thousands of volts? You can feel the static electric charge as it directly affects your body hair

          Additionally there is evidence humans can sense magnetic fields, with some populations always knowing where north is, and using cardinal directions in place of forward, backwards, left, right, front, and back

          Outsiders who have spent time with those people have learnt to sense their orientation.

    • @Petter1@discuss.tchncs.de
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      3120 days ago

      You did not feel electricity, you felt what it did to your body 🤓

      And your heart felt the frequency 🤓🤓 assuming AC… hope you do your regular ECG 🫶🏻

    • ButtBidet [he/him]
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      2420 days ago

      Have you ever had a conversation with electricity?!?!?

      checkmate, “electricians”

    • MrsDoyle
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      920 days ago

      I may be an outlier here, but I’ve experienced mild electric shock from touching a random bare cable sticking out of a wall, and I found it weirdly pleasant. Refreshing, almost.

    • Una
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      520 days ago

      Or did you felt it? vsauce music

      • @psud@aussie.zone
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        15 days ago

        Get charged to a few thousand volts, and you will feel the electric charge pushing your hairs away from each other

        You’ll feel the electric fields just as you feel a breeze

    • @Denvil@lemmy.ml
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      119 days ago

      Fellow electrician here, I’m convinced that electricity is magic. I’ve only been in electric for 2 years or so, but I’ll be damned if I know how that shit works. The copper touches together and that equals light, or motors spinning, or whatever have you. How? Idk, smarter people figured that out, I’m just here to make sure the damned drywallers don’t cover up our magic copper

      • @bobs_monkey@lemmy.zip
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        119 days ago

        Look up “potential difference” and that should make everything make a little more sense.

        Basically, the voltage component of electricity wants to flow where the potential is less than itself. In a 120v circuit, the neutral is bonded to ground at the main for a reference of 0v, and you hot leg will find the path of least resistance to that 0v (through the devices we put in line of that circuit, be it lights, motors, etc). The current, or load, in amps, is the work being done by those devices in conjunction with the designed resistance.

        Think of a simple incandescent light bulb. The filament has a certain level of resistance that’s designed to sustain a glow when power is applied to it. The 120v potential, trying to reach 0v ground, passes through that filament (the load), making it glow (the current draw is the amount of amps necessary to achieve its full brightness). A motor is similar; power passes through the windings, generating a magnetic field that react with magnets and spin the motor.

        Basically, your voltage drives the power through its path to ground, and current is drawn by work being done. V multiplied by A is Watts (kW), or power consumed.