
Damn. I was hoping to see more drivel from this joker.
Most of it has been copied, with several mistakes.I wonder if he wrote that himself, or if he copied it from something?
while that is almost correct, the current which flows when a person in contact with a live conductor will in virtually all circumstances be far greater than 30mA, and if less, the effect on the person would be minimal or none.The RCD will prevent a shock of 30mA, but will not prevent a shock of an extended duration of a magnitude of less than 30mA
Part 1 Introduction, Interpretation 2 - (i)
There are no reasonable circumstances in which a metal bath, sink, radiator, doorknob, window frame, bog roll holder or other metal items unrelated to an electrical installation could become charged (i.e. connected to a live source).
Mr Cockburn's entire argument appears to rely on a ficticious damaged flex somehow contacting these metal items and therefore causing a shock risk. While this is not impossible, it is highly improbable, and therefore of no relevance to how an electrical system is designed.
An electrical system should be designed to be safe what ever "reasonable" fault occurs. But how does one define "reasonable".
Are you ignorant, or stupid?an RCD doesn't work indoors
Are you ignorant, or stupid?You only have to touch the back of your finger on an energised circuit conductor to know that an RCD doesn't work indoors
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