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Student
Jul 13, 2023
111
Being electrocuted is extremely unpleasant. How it feels and how it ends depends on many factors: the voltage, the resistance (on the skin, in the electrical network, and in the body), and the type and frequency of the current. A truly lethal electric shock feels like being kicked by a horse. Death can result from muscle dysfunction (heart failure) or burns.
 
F

Front Back

Member
Apr 27, 2026
84
From what I've seen it should be fast, must've use higher voltage
 
N

Nolongerlive

Student
Feb 28, 2026
129
With some education in electrical engineering, i can tell you this should be the fastest of all methods, measured in milli-second.
 
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N

Nolongerlive

Student
Feb 28, 2026
129
Yes, millisecond. ( in normal household)
The Code of Practise ( regulation and guideline ) for household required the safety device to cutoff the fault current within certain time in milliseconds , so the fault current will not kill you.

What you posted are high voltage power distribution cable, which can not be interrupted normally.
 
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Intoxicated

Intoxicated

MIA Man
Nov 16, 2023
1,237
Yes, millisecond. ( in normal household)
The Code of Practise ( regulation and guideline ) for household required the safety device to cutoff the fault current within certain time in milliseconds , so the fault current will not kill you.
Regulations differ worldwide. In some houses, RCDs are neither installed nor required by the local rules. In some places, where such a protection is installed, it can be dismantled without significant efforts. It's also possible to use a single-phase isolation transformer to render RCD useless due to galvanic isolation.
 
Macedonian1987

Macedonian1987

Just a sad guy from Macedonia.
Oct 22, 2025
1,011
When I was just 4-5 years old (yes I was that young) I nearly electrocuted myself. I was touching an electrical socket with a knife with a pointy tip. I got shocked pretty badly and the fuse blew out after just 1-2 seconds and saved my life.

It's not a fun way to go. Believe me.
 

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