ElectroBoom is one of my favorite channels. I found your channel and after seeing the first video, you managed to win me over with your sympathy. Now I'm looking at them all as you post them. Congratulations man, this is really funny and the way you use to explain high voltage and electrocution is very detailed. You are really nice.
I never get tired of you reacting to electroboom, it's why I subbed to your channel, to begin with, keep up the amazing reactions. If you ever do another one of these videos again soon. I suggest the video where he does Electricity pain versus frequency as it is similar to these levels, but the frequency aspect of pain tolerance displays some interesting results when I saw the videos myself, like the difference between an electric shock and the burning sensation from the same source but different frequencies. I'm not sure if you have reacted to something similar.
What you do don't try at home will electric bill for payment so this respond it so need battery or solier system little cost $900.00 so that make sure for sunlight charging and electric bill
That electric guitar video is almost certainly the thing that got me hooked on electronics. I just saw it somewhere back when it was uploaded, which made me watch his other videos and moved onto other electronics TH-camrs from there Didn't quite become an electrician though, I started a career in IT but electronics is a pretty handy hobby to have when working with any kind of computer hardware
6:20 you measured 50 MOhms with 'undamaged' skin on your hand. Once higher voltage is applied, surface of the skin may be charred, thus conducting electricity better than clear, dry and undamaged skin. That is why you feel shock on your 9V battery on your tongue - no skin.
On the topic of electric guitar, it may also be important to address the dangers of an amplifier not being properly grounded. On a guitar, every piece of metal is connected to ground as to not cause interference with the guitar's output, and when you touch the strings or even one of the control knobs, if you have the kind that are made of metal, you are connected to ground, which you will notice if you crank the gain up and touch the strings, you'll hear there's less interference. If you plug your guitar into an amplifier that has grounding issues, the current inside the amplifier can end up going through the instrument cable and into your body, which can be lethal. Valve/tube amplifiers run at 300 to 500 volts DC in order to power said valves. Fortunately, this is rare and from what I've heard, only really happens in old amplifiers or if your electrical installation has grounding issues (which can pose all sorts of risks with all sorts of electrical equipment).
I don't think so. If you slow it down you see the electrodes cross before he grabs them. I reattached it a few times because it looked so close. He really plans his stuff.
@@jhoughjr1 I think 85-95% of the time he has shit well planned out and only slightly hurts himself for our sadistic viewing pleasure. But I've seen quite a few times that he's forgotten a thing or 2 and zapped himself pretty good or something blew up when he didn't expect it to. I think that the jacobs ladder was half planned, half accident. He purposefully made his leads short and weak, just in case what happened, happened. Like a breakaway lead or hitch on a line of backcountry trail mules. lol. I don't know how else to describe that because i'm not an electrician or an engineer but have run trains of mules in the Idaho backcountry and you don't tie them together with big heavy ropes. You use breakaways so that if one of them slips and falls off a cliff, the breaker pops on the faulty mule and it breaks away from the circuit without taking the rest of the train and yourself, over the cliff along with it. Hmmm. The original circuit breaker!
@@thinklist Oh and BTW I think that I will probably have to subscribe. Cuz the secondestest thing funnier than watching electroBOOM videos while learning shit too, is watching someone else LTFAO to him also. It makes me laugh even harder watching other people LTFAO.. Man, we need more teachers like him! I would have NEVER skipped a day of school, EVER, if that guy was my teacher. He could teach math, science, electrical engineering, drama class, photo/video/editing class, home economics and how to save your fucking life class, all in one! Mehdi for president as the WOOOOOORRRRRRLLLLDDDDDDDDD Bridge Rectifier!
About the Electroboom electric guitar video (I guess others already point this out) he actually reveal that he didnt plug the guitar on wall supply on his later video about making electric toothbrush. btw just found this channel and I really like your content and ofc i directly subs :))) Keep it up
@@thinklist if you pause at the exact moment when he hit's the strings, you'll see that the arc flash is just scribbled in paint or something. You just don't notice because you only see it for a frame.
Defibrillators actually work by stopping all activity in the heart. Cardiac muscle has the ability to initiate a contraction, ventricular fibrillation is just the heart muscle doing its own thing. A defibrillator gives a high voltage shock of up to 360J in one direction (monophasic) or up to 150J in two directions (biphasic). Stopping all contractions allows the main pacemaker of the heart (the sinoatrial node) to initiate normal contractions and restore blood flow. An interesting point is that when I used to defibrillate with monophasic machines, I gave more shocks before the fibrillation turned to an asystole or flat line. Biphasic machines are far more efficient at stopping the fibrillation, which should mean more patients surviving but not many due to the time from cardiac arrest to CPR and defibrillation. This is why there are now community defibrillators appearing everywhere. Great video.
Has anyone recommended Mattias Krantz's latest video? He's not experienced with electricity, but he recently made an electric piano in a similar vein to the electric guitar in this video (and actually got help from ElectroBoom in the idea.
Lmao. I got hit with 220 a decade ago from an old fridge at a rental cabin. Wet hands and electricity don't mix. It singed my hand and threw me back across the room.
Yea A-fib and V-fib are the 2 shockable rhythms also AEDs are quite smart and tell you everything to do also average output is about 120-200 joules and have to be able to give 200+ shocks
There is this one day I pranked my friends the door is metallic and connected to ground and I convinced them to hold the door I hold the live wire and touch them to give them a powerful shock
You also have to consider whether or not you have baby hands or cowhide leather hands when you my get a shock. Best just wear rated gloves if you have to work live.
Current is directly proportional Voltage providing the resistance is constant. For example: 240V / 10 ohm = 24A 24V / 10 ohm = 2.4A Where I think you might be confused is Current is inversely proportional to Resistance 240V / 10 ohm = 24A 240V / 20 ohm = 12A Hope this helps 💪
Subscribe used to do things back in the day (like 4-5 years ago) but then they changed the recommendation algorithm to be less and less reliant on subscribers.Idk what the point of it is now either lool.
12:47 wowowowowowowow do you know how much this triangle shocked me? Its the most bullshit thing. Just learn to solve for a variable correctly! (i am studying physics tho,and my heart stopped, cause this reminded me of some stupidity of dumb teaching)
@@thinklist your viewers are surely working on some electronics projects. if they need help with that: the discord you could also make some videos of some interesting circuits everyone can build - and if they need help with that: the discord
Seeing an actual electrician react to ElectroBOOM’s vids is glorious. Glad I subbed.
ElectroBoom is one of my favorite channels.
I found your channel and after seeing the first video, you managed to win me over with your sympathy. Now I'm looking at them all as you post them. Congratulations man, this is really funny and the way you use to explain high voltage and electrocution is very detailed. You are really nice.
I never get tired of you reacting to electroboom, it's why I subbed to your channel, to begin with, keep up the amazing reactions. If you ever do another one of these videos again soon. I suggest the video where he does Electricity pain versus frequency as it is similar to these levels, but the frequency aspect of pain tolerance displays some interesting results when I saw the videos myself, like the difference between an electric shock and the burning sensation from the same source but different frequencies. I'm not sure if you have reacted to something similar.
Thanks so much mate. I will definitely be doing more of these and I will look into pain vs frequency 💪
Same here.
What you do don't try at home will electric bill for payment so this respond it so need battery or solier system little cost $900.00 so that make sure for sunlight charging and electric bill
I love how much effort you put into the videos you make. Keep on going!
Thanks mate, really appreciate the support 💪
HEISENBERG!!! where's that blue candy at my guy
@@sus-gibble4721 I am working on it, 60 dollars a gram
@@sus-gibble4721 I saw your comment in that vid of the person who cut their hair short
Jesse we need to make a full bridge rectifier
That electric guitar video is almost certainly the thing that got me hooked on electronics. I just saw it somewhere back when it was uploaded, which made me watch his other videos and moved onto other electronics TH-camrs from there
Didn't quite become an electrician though, I started a career in IT but electronics is a pretty handy hobby to have when working with any kind of computer hardware
6:20 you measured 50 MOhms with 'undamaged' skin on your hand. Once higher voltage is applied, surface of the skin may be charred, thus conducting electricity better than clear, dry and undamaged skin. That is why you feel shock on your 9V battery on your tongue - no skin.
On the topic of electric guitar, it may also be important to address the dangers of an amplifier not being properly grounded. On a guitar, every piece of metal is connected to ground as to not cause interference with the guitar's output, and when you touch the strings or even one of the control knobs, if you have the kind that are made of metal, you are connected to ground, which you will notice if you crank the gain up and touch the strings, you'll hear there's less interference. If you plug your guitar into an amplifier that has grounding issues, the current inside the amplifier can end up going through the instrument cable and into your body, which can be lethal. Valve/tube amplifiers run at 300 to 500 volts DC in order to power said valves. Fortunately, this is rare and from what I've heard, only really happens in old amplifiers or if your electrical installation has grounding issues (which can pose all sorts of risks with all sorts of electrical equipment).
One of the few times he really electrocuted himself dangerously was with the jacobsladder.
I don't think so. If you slow it down you see the electrodes cross before he grabs them. I reattached it a few times because it looked so close. He really plans his stuff.
I watched an interview about the jacobs ladder and he said that was one of the time he truly hurt himself 🤕
@@jhoughjr1 I think 85-95% of the time he has shit well planned out and only slightly hurts himself for our sadistic viewing pleasure. But I've seen quite a few times that he's forgotten a thing or 2 and zapped himself pretty good or something blew up when he didn't expect it to. I think that the jacobs ladder was half planned, half accident. He purposefully made his leads short and weak, just in case what happened, happened. Like a breakaway lead or hitch on a line of backcountry trail mules. lol. I don't know how else to describe that because i'm not an electrician or an engineer but have run trains of mules in the Idaho backcountry and you don't tie them together with big heavy ropes. You use breakaways so that if one of them slips and falls off a cliff, the breaker pops on the faulty mule and it breaks away from the circuit without taking the rest of the train and yourself, over the cliff along with it. Hmmm. The original circuit breaker!
@@thinklist Oh and BTW I think that I will probably have to subscribe. Cuz the secondestest thing funnier than watching electroBOOM videos while learning shit too, is watching someone else LTFAO to him also. It makes me laugh even harder watching other people LTFAO.. Man, we need more teachers like him! I would have NEVER skipped a day of school, EVER, if that guy was my teacher. He could teach math, science, electrical engineering, drama class, photo/video/editing class, home economics and how to save your fucking life class, all in one! Mehdi for president as the WOOOOOORRRRRRLLLLDDDDDDDDD Bridge Rectifier!
At 6:12 , the IR Tester is on 1000V range, so you multiply the meter reading by 2.
So 50M reading == 100M actual.
About the Electroboom electric guitar video (I guess others already point this out) he actually reveal that he didnt plug the guitar on wall supply on his later video about making electric toothbrush. btw just found this channel and I really like your content and ofc i directly subs :))) Keep it up
Oh nice one ☝️ I might have to watch it.
And thanks some much for the support 💪
@@thinklist if you pause at the exact moment when he hit's the strings, you'll see that the arc flash is just scribbled in paint or something. You just don't notice because you only see it for a frame.
Defibrillators actually work by stopping all activity in the heart. Cardiac muscle has the ability to initiate a contraction, ventricular fibrillation is just the heart muscle doing its own thing. A defibrillator gives a high voltage shock of up to 360J in one direction (monophasic) or up to 150J in two directions (biphasic). Stopping all contractions allows the main pacemaker of the heart (the sinoatrial node) to initiate normal contractions and restore blood flow. An interesting point is that when I used to defibrillate with monophasic machines, I gave more shocks before the fibrillation turned to an asystole or flat line. Biphasic machines are far more efficient at stopping the fibrillation, which should mean more patients surviving but not many due to the time from cardiac arrest to CPR and defibrillation. This is why there are now community defibrillators appearing everywhere.
Great video.
Wow that’s a lot of defib info. Thanks for the support
Has anyone recommended Mattias Krantz's latest video? He's not experienced with electricity, but he recently made an electric piano in a similar vein to the electric guitar in this video (and actually got help from ElectroBoom in the idea.
Yay. You do it!
💪
The Asmongold of electricity
Remember, everyone, protons taste sour and electrons taste power.
He didn't plug it into the wall. He has his own flip switch. A lot of the time he activates this to get the shock.
6:59 🤣🤣
This is opening my eyes to new possibilities and avenues
How so 🤔
Lmao. I got hit with 220 a decade ago from an old fridge at a rental cabin. Wet hands and electricity don't mix. It singed my hand and threw me back across the room.
Yea A-fib and V-fib are the 2 shockable rhythms also AEDs are quite smart and tell you everything to do also average output is about 120-200 joules and have to be able to give 200+ shocks
a defib will restart a heart, they were invented to settle down a fribulating heartbeat hence the name but they frequently use them to restart a heart
AC electricity is painful, so we can say that it hertz
Even though he faked the guitar vid, and a few others, electroboom is still good to watch.
So true he is a legend
2:45🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤣🤣🤣
Great video. Liked and subscribed.
Thanks for the support mate 💪
@@thinklist Happy to support you mate! 😃
kindly react on Mattias Krantz' Electric Piano
around 14:53 he did say that he was going to 60 Hz
You look like Nick Swordson from Reno 911 & Grandmas Boy !
OMG you’re so right 😆 I bloody love that guy. Some guys at work tell me I look like Louis Theroux 👌
i'm in school learning to be electrician 😁
Pleease react to William Osman creating a X-ray machine himself:D
This is a new one ☝️ for me. Thanks for the suggestion
There is this one day I pranked my friends the door is metallic and connected to ground and I convinced them to hold the door I hold the live wire and touch them to give them a powerful shock
Pls react to electroBOOM’s shock belt next! 💯
Sounds like fun 😆
I do not understand why this video is age-restricted
110V is less thanhalf what we use in Australia so there's that
his Jacobs ladder one is good. You should react to that one
I did do one of his jacobs ladder 🪜 already. You should check it out
@@thinklist that was an actually lethal shock that he didn't mean to happen so it wasn't acted out
13:38 lmao
You also have to consider whether or not you have baby hands or cowhide leather hands when you my get a shock. Best just wear rated gloves if you have to work live.
Remember that but such don't try at home this response for deleting it video is no longer
Man, i tired of watching electrobooms videos again and again :) thanks for this. When is photonicinduction ?
Check out Pt.7
@@thinklist already watched. I mean when is the new part?
Please react to his marx generator!!
Oh yes this one is on my list
@@thinklist react to diodegonewild too!!
The sstc series
@@andriangarces2760 I’ll check it out thanks 🙏
To anyone I sent this to or wants to see one of the funniest parts 2:45
I thought the higher the voltage the less the amperage so if you have a low volt you have more current
Current is directly proportional Voltage providing the resistance is constant.
For example:
240V / 10 ohm = 24A
24V / 10 ohm = 2.4A
Where I think you might be confused is Current is inversely proportional to Resistance
240V / 10 ohm = 24A
240V / 20 ohm = 12A
Hope this helps 💪
Here for the algorithm
I fkkn subbed you're poggers nice hat
Subscribe used to do things back in the day (like 4-5 years ago) but then they changed the recommendation algorithm to be less and less reliant on subscribers.Idk what the point of it is now either lool.
I know right. It’s not just me
lol. 7.54 "fibulation" do you perchance mean fibrillation?
wot if i tuch a fence enagizer i got one it works a spark plug
Actually that would be a good experiment 🧪 with a spark plug
Funny videos, thx :}
LEGEND 💪
You should react to Cody's lab
Nice one mate 👌
@@thinklist thanks
12:47 wowowowowowowow
do you know how much this triangle shocked me? Its the most bullshit thing. Just learn to solve for a variable correctly!
(i am studying physics tho,and my heart stopped, cause this reminded me of some stupidity of dumb teaching)
Did you really have Covid?
Yep sure did. Not too bad though 🤷♂️
@@thinklist OK. I had Covid19 in March, right before my birthday. My symptoms were something between the flu and a cold.
how about a discord?
🤔
@@thinklist your viewers are surely working on some electronics projects.
if they need help with that: the discord
you could also make some videos of some interesting circuits everyone can build - and if they need help with that: the discord
@@shardsmp8831 that’s actually a great idea 💡 I might look into some common circuits to break down
@@thinklist 👍thank you
if you pause the guitar just right is fake but funny just a blue over the video for a frame
You make no sense, 50M ohm???
first :D
💪
Fifth
Nice