Tesla didn't actually commercialize it, Westinghouse did; New York City was first electricuted, er, supplied with direct current by Edison (his company later incorporated under the name General Electric). However, it may have been better for the users if Edison and Westinghouse had partnered and the cross-country transmission lines were alternating current (AC won out because of the long distance drop of DC) and the in-house supply was an AC-to-DC converter, therefore enabling an immediate battery back-up in emergencies. Much of our electrical in-home products convert the AC to DC, anyway (like our computers, stereos, etc.); incandescent lamps don't care which type of current lights them up -- except that @71 volts DC will result in about the same brightness as @100 volts AC.BLAZE wrote:Look.. I know this was a joke (and a very good one at that)
but I can't help it, I have to say it to the people of earth, we
should be referencing "Nikola Tesla". Not that D#CK Thomas Edison.
Nikola Tesla came up with what we use today "alternating current".
Among other things!
Of the double scars on my left index finger, one was from mistaking my finger for a pumpkin stem and, ten years later, while installing the venting for my clothes dryer; my left middle finger is out-of-round at the end because, on a pile of brake cylinders, my gloved finger was popped open under the crushing slide of some of the cylinders on top (I worked at a salvage yard for about two months after my military discharge). Although neither is prominent, the exit scar on my right hand ring finger is from the canine tooth of 28 pounds of swinging canine (a Spaniel-Spitz mix -- my hand was in the way when, out of jealousy, he attacked the German Shepard I was petting).Fozzer wrote:The funny thing is, after a lifetime of fiddling with "electrics" from a very early age, and 34 years employed as a qualified electrical engineer before retiring, I would be very hard pressed to recall getting an electrical shock from a 240 VAC 50Hz supply....(or even a high voltage, 50k+, Television set, during repairs),....contacting 440VAC 50HZ across two phases would be deadly!
Like most trades, one gets used to learning, very early on, the possible dangers present in ones particular trade, and taking great care to avoid them!
(Carpenters/woodworkers take great care to retain a full set of fingers!)
Paul...A very bright spark.......!
JP wrote:Reminds me of when our science teacher was showing us the van de graaf generator(or something like that) and he needed someone to demonstrate what would happen if you weren't standing on an insulator... Guess what idiot volunteered?
BLAZE wrote:OldAirmail wrote:I bet these guys have more respect for electricity than you do.![]()
https://www.simviation.com/phpupload/uploads/1389945654.jpg
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That's messed up man! It looks like they did it on a dare or something.
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