stun gun voltage - sabre red · stun gun voltage: one of the biggest, most dangerous myths in...
TRANSCRIPT
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Let’s think of electricity as a water pipe to understand the relationship between
voltage, current, and charge.
Think about a water pipe in your home. You can set the water pressure (voltage) to the
highest setting possible, but this doesn’t do anything for you if there’s no water in the pipe (current) ,
which carries the quantity of water (charge).
Even if you set the water pressure (voltage) to high, you can’t get wet if you don’t have any water (current).
The greater the quantity of that water (charge), the wetter you get (more pain you feel).
currentDefinition: A flow of electricity. Measured in amps (A).
Example: Water in the pipe
voltageDefinition: The force of an electrical current. Measured in volts (V).
Example: Water pressure
chargeDefinition: An amount of electricity.
Measured in coulombs (Q) or microcoulombs (uC). 1Q=1A x 1 sec
Example: Quantity of water that flowed through the pipe
STUN GUN VOLTAGE: ONE OF THE BIGGEST, MOST DANGEROUS MYTHS IN PERSONAL SAFETY
What indicates strength is MICROCOULOMBS, which measure charge
X
FACT
Remember that there’s no CURRENT without CHARGE. Think of our analogy. The CHARGE is analogous to the amount of water; you can have a still body of water.
However, you can’t have a CURRENT if there’s nothing for it to carry. The amount of CHARGE, or pain felt, is analogous to how wet you get. With a greater CURRENT, you can carry more CHARGE in a given period of time.
< CURRENT = < CHARGE = < SHOCK
The
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is meaningless
UNLESS
The
GREATER
voltage
water pressure
current in the conductive path.
water in the pipe.
thecharge
quantity of water
the
more pain you feel.
wetter you get.
Current alone can hurt youwhereas voltage alone cannot
— University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign“
”
(current x time)
MYTH:Voltage indicates stun gun strength.