my electrician friend told me that even only 440 volts will jump out and find you.
my electrician friend told me that even only 440 volts will jump out and find you.
I'm still trying to figure out what all the censoring was for. I don't think he minds!
I am an electrician and cutting copper in a substation is one of the most ridiculous things imaginable. Most of the live wires are up high but at most substations they have grounds to make a neutral, that is, a path for electricity to go to ground. When you hear about some "Darwin award nominee" dying stealing copper it is because they cut one of these wires and then they became the grounds.
If you want to see what electricity can do there are lots of pictures around the web that would convince you not to mess with it. The one that sticks with me is a guy in mexico who tried to cut the wires off a transformer. Not sure of the voltage but it removed his head from his body and it landed on the top of the transformer.
Suffice it to say there are easier ways to earn a living than trying to steal copper out of energized equipment.
Think of your body as the arc in arc welder.
3-phase 440 will reach out, grab you, and set you on your A$$.
i found that out the hard way while troubleshooting a motor controller in a plant i used to work at, i was at least 2ft from any of the controller contacts had protective gear, thought i was fine; and i heard it hit me (never saw it or felt it; but heard what sounded like a clap of thunder so loud my ears hurt) and next thing i know i'm gettin loaded in an ambulance with sensors glued all over my chest and them telling me i was **** lucky to be alive and that my heart rhythm was out of sync as a result of the shock.
i have always had respect for electricity, but that caught me off guard even with the proper training and protective equipment, i cant imagine going anywhere near 100x that much power without SERIOUS precautions.
Last edited by ilovejunk; 02-16-2015 at 12:43 AM.
I would be a bit more careful in how you describe people who scrap. I don't think the word "tweeker" has anything to do with people who are scrappers, as I believe scrappers are doing so to sustain a means of living, while "tweekers" are stealing to get their next fix. Let me go further to make this distinction. Scrappers are hard working people who are recycling items that most often would otherwise find their way into a landfill, helping nobody. They often employ their friends, family, even children in these endeavors ensuring that others are exposed, and educated in this unique and admirable way of making a living. A tweeker is someone who smokes crystal meth or is ingesting meth in some form regardless if they are sniffing, smoking or shooting it up. These people will do almost anything to pay for a fix when they do not have the funds to do so. This includes stealing, robbing, mugging, scamming, etc. They are no scrappers, and scrappers are not thieves or tweekers. It bothers me deeply you would make this correlation at all.
I know this may come off a little harsh, but I believe, truly believe that when people post things like this they are not looking to demean others, as I don't think that was your intent either. However, be mindful in that whatever you post here ends up being searchable on google search, if someone were to read this post it might seem that someone is making the correlation between people who are scrappers, and those considered drug users and then that these people also steal copper.
I have no problem with the posting of the story, and I agree that thieves deserve what they get when this type of thing happens. But I take offense making the assumption this person was a tweeker and scrapper both.
Scott
At the heart of science is an essential balance between two seemingly contradictory attitudes--an openness to new ideas, no matter how bizarre or counterintuitive they may be, and the most ruthless skeptical scrutiny of all ideas, old and new. This is how deep truths are winnowed from deep nonsense. -- Carl Sagan
Not doubting your experience, but as a former Radar technician who has worked on equipment at much higher voltages, I believe there had to be some other fault at play to get the arc over distance you described. Loose or corroded connections or faulty components may have been the cause. I concur that those without appropriate training and protective gear and backup personnel need to stay away from energized high voltage equipment. The following link gives some guidance on approach boundaries for this type of equipment:
http://www.usbr.gov/ssle/safety/RSHS/sec12.pdf
I had the misfortune of having a electrician killed at work, a smell that I'll never forget. This man was a contractor, brought in to upgrade and install new hanger lighting. He broke every rule in the book, when it comes to working with electricity. The buddy system, isolating the voltage source, safety tagging of switches and the most important, electricity will always seek the least path of resistance. The human body is a good conductor, but he paid with his life to find out, that it can be a fuse until it quits conducting!
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