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general electricity question
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<blockquote data-quote="Franklinnn" data-source="post: 6606606" data-attributes="member: 616352"><p>I was talking with my girlfriend about electricity (i shocked her because of a lot of buildup in a fleece blanket- and it hurt like hell)</p><p></p><p>I was explaining a little about volts/amps/and watts</p><p></p><p>and how you COULD get shocked at 10,000 volts, but like .0001a and not feel it, but could be killed by 1volt at 10,000a.</p><p></p><p>is that correct? its been a while since ive been in a physics class and know a fair amount of car audio. just curious.</p><p></p><p>And the big question that had me bogged is:</p><p></p><p>what are the properties of the shock in most static shocks in daily used (like socks on carpet+door knobs) like volts,amps,joules,watts any such. it would be great!!</p><p></p><p>i know it may be easy for some, but i am curious to know.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Franklinnn, post: 6606606, member: 616352"] I was talking with my girlfriend about electricity (i shocked her because of a lot of buildup in a fleece blanket- and it hurt like hell) I was explaining a little about volts/amps/and watts and how you COULD get shocked at 10,000 volts, but like .0001a and not feel it, but could be killed by 1volt at 10,000a. is that correct? its been a while since ive been in a physics class and know a fair amount of car audio. just curious. And the big question that had me bogged is: what are the properties of the shock in most static shocks in daily used (like socks on carpet+door knobs) like volts,amps,joules,watts any such. it would be great!! i know it may be easy for some, but i am curious to know. [/QUOTE]
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