davenn said:
I would love to know the origin of that, have never seen anything specific in print.
here in Australia and New Zealand we also use the 220-240V standard.
In my travels around the USA, I was very suprised at the "interesting" cabling in some homes at 110V. Made me cringe when one considers that the current flowing at 110V is twice that than at 220V for an appliance of the same wattage.
Mind you on trips to the Philippines (my wife's home land) looking at the way 110V is strung around that and connected into with basic barrier connectors really freaks you out haha
Dave
But the voltage is still half that. And it's voltage that causes current to flow. I can't figure out why people think that the higher amps are dangerous.
Looking at a naive, extreme example, which would you rather handle: 1kV@1mA or 1mV@1kA?* Each one is only 1W, but I think there's a big safety difference there.
If we were dealing with constant current sources and our bodies were being put in series with the load, then the higher current would be bad. 1mA would be hardly noticeable, but 1kA will cook your goose pretty tender (if it doesn't explosively boil away).
But, the vast majority of power sources are constant (somewhat)
voltage sources, and most of the time (I think at least) a shock happens because our bodies provide a path to ground in
parallel with the load. In the parallel case, it's the voltage that's applied across the body. 1mV is harmless, but 1kV is serious stuff.
By my thinking, 1mV@1kA would be much, much safer to handle than 1kV@1mA. That's the reason why the long distance transmission wires that carry the huge voltages (hundreds of kilovolts) are put so high up and so carefully insulated, even though they carry less current; it's the voltage value that's dangerous.
From this analysis, I conclude that 240V is more dangerous than 120V; though 120 is still plenty dangerous.
If my thinking is too naive, I'd love to be corrected.
Unless I misinterpreted you, and you were referring to the higher current creating more heat and increasing the risks of electrical fires and the like. In which case this entire post is pretty misguided.
* Yes, I realize that these numbers are highly unrealistic, but I've found that the quickest way for me to understand things is to talk about what happens at the extreme ends rather than muck around with a dozen middle-of-the-road examples.