Giacomo Lepore
Guest
Can you help me understand something?
a colleague of mine says that:
1. with the 230 vac "be attached to the current", while the 400vac is less dangerous because "shoot you away".
2. with the continuous current there is no risk of "remaining attached" because if there is no oscillation of tension the muscles do not remain contracted.
Now, from my reminiscences I am quite certain that 230 vac or 400 vac tetanization always happens, and if you are above the release current you are shot. But it's not the first time I hear this, so maybe something real is there, just I don't understand it.
for the second point, what happens with the continuous? does tetanization happen or not? I think so, but maybe I'm wrong.
We only talk about these two aspects, all other electrocution damage (fibrillation, dissociation, joule effect, etc.) are clearer and doubtless.
a colleague of mine says that:
1. with the 230 vac "be attached to the current", while the 400vac is less dangerous because "shoot you away".
2. with the continuous current there is no risk of "remaining attached" because if there is no oscillation of tension the muscles do not remain contracted.
Now, from my reminiscences I am quite certain that 230 vac or 400 vac tetanization always happens, and if you are above the release current you are shot. But it's not the first time I hear this, so maybe something real is there, just I don't understand it.
for the second point, what happens with the continuous? does tetanization happen or not? I think so, but maybe I'm wrong.
We only talk about these two aspects, all other electrocution damage (fibrillation, dissociation, joule effect, etc.) are clearer and doubtless.