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Hook Run
DJ Clive$ter Lyrics


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The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
Most interesting comments from YouTube:

@-_-----

Things I learned even in VERY amateur welding and electronics work:
- NO WATER, ANYWHERE, EVER.
- Heavy gloves, dry rubber-sole boots.
- Never grab uninsulated wires... or any wires-not-intended-to-be-grabbed at all for that case.
- Know which parts of the circuit are 'hot', and always give a second thought whenever you're about to interact with the Hot side.
- Find and discharge ALL capacitors before mucking around in electronics - if you don't know, wear gloves until you can probe and confirm the entire thing's de-powered.
- Triple-check these rules when you're about to use anything that has to be powered on during operation.

I wanna die fighting a radioactive mutant Grizzly Bear shirtless on a mountain with a K-bar..... not 'bzzt owie zappie ded'.
What a trivial way to go :(



@cpK054L

actually... a transformer WILL make noise if connected on a main line
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AeuApLeCs5A ← 60 Hz Square Wave
It hisses at "60 Hz"... but you have to include the harmonics... so I think a "square wave" would be pretty appropriate.. but really.. you'll want ALL the harmonics not just the fundamental.

You'll also not hear the hissing until the circuit is completed, as the current loop is what causes it.

It also takes MILLIONS of volts to cause "arc flashing" as that causes the air around to have a "voltage breakdown"

Given that the microwave transformer wasn't really rated for that level of voltage... the arcing is possibly caused by the inrush current from a discharged capacitor.



All comments from YouTube:

@marshfield01

I'll share my experience for those that think its trivial to play with high voltage. My high voltage gloves got partially pierced by a metal splinter on a ground transformer and allowed a path to ground on a 13.8KV line.


It was only 20-30 seconds of time slowing down to where a second feels like a minute. You feel fear and a great sense of dread as your heart goes into afib because of confused messages from the vagal nerve trying to override your SA node. About three second in all your muscles start to cramp and burn(literally) along the path to ground. You cant make yourself let go and you cant think of why, but you definitely know you are being electrocuted. About ten second in you start to smell burning pork and your vision starts to close in around the edges because your heart cant pump blood. You feel as dizzy and high as you have ever felt as the color starts to leave your vision. About fifteen seconds in you start to miss your wife and kids because as your vision fades slowly out you understand you are dying. As your world fades from view, and a blackness so deep it envelops all of your being smothers you, you are left with a great sense of sorrow and pain that stretches to eternity, or in my case, when I woke up in the ICU a month later missing the small parts of me that made up the ground path. There was only sorrow and fear and pain the entire time from my grounding to my waking. It felt like I was gone for twenty years, like when you visit your childhood home after your parents are gone. Without perception of time, time has no meaning. The lack of perception is eternity.



So yeah, as a ex lineman, I can assure you that you will feel more in those few seconds than you ever have before.

@lrodd247

Wow, that was beautifully put ,yet deep, sad, fearful and thrilling at the same time! Glad you were given a second chance and be able to tell your story . Stay safe 😎✌

@kchinkflinch

So glad you made it through in the end - it must have been a long and tough recovery to get through afterwards. Thanks for sharing your life threatening experience and thanks for facing all the risks you've had to cope with every day at work so the rest of us can have modern lives. Respect!

I think even if I had the proper tools and took extra precautions, because of your comment I'm going to avoid high voltage experiments and leave it to the professionals.

@tylerleavitt2715

You need to write a book about this. You have a gift you were given.

@android584

Thanks for sharing your experience, I always wondered what an electric shock felt like, glad your electrocution wasn't fatal.

@qpSubZeroqp

Thank you for sharing your beautifully written traumatic experience!
It certainly makes you think twice about working with live current.

403 More Replies...

@dustinslaboratory897

My dad (tv repair man) always told us to be extra careful when tinkering with transformers. To give more weight to his warnings, he zapped both me and my brother with a supertiny transformer and an AA battery, and then drew a schematic to explain what just happened. Times have changed, but transformers haven't.

@jdyerjdyer

For kicks as a kid we used to take the tiny ones out of the big flame lighters and even those tiny things would give a really good zap! (I know technically not transformers, but a magnet being fed through a coil when you press the button. Similar principle, though.)

@felixcosty

Was fixing an old BW tube tv and completed the circuit and discharged the flyback transformer. lucky for me my elbows rested on my knees, was wearing shorts sitting on the floor. A unknown time later was awake found out my one arm did not want to move when I told it. An hour or so later my arm moved like normal. Was very very lucky When I came too was 4 feet away from the tv and pressed hard against the wall.

@alejandrolujan9472

good father, my friend. you're a lucky duck

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