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Man Shocks Boy To Stop Him From Urinating On Elect Devices

 
 
Reyn
 
Reply Wed 16 Aug, 2006 07:42 pm
Quote:
Police: Man Shocks Boy To Stop Him From Urinating On Electrical Devices

POSTED: 5:17 pm EDT August 14, 2006
UPDATED: 5:23 pm EDT August 14, 2006

A Florida man is accused of aggravated child abuse after allegedly using an electrical device to intentionally shock a 3½-year-old boy to teach him the dangers of electricity, according to WJXT-TV.

According to the Clay County Sheriff's Office, Paul Trotman, 51, was watching the child when the Florida Department of Children and Families removed the boy, according to the report.

Trotman and his wife were chosen as caregivers by the boy's parents, but the home was not approved for foster care by DCF.

Trotman, an electrician employed at the Kings Bay Naval Station, admitted using a transformer putting out 56 volts to shock the boy who was intentionally urinating on electrical devices to see them spark, the WJXT-TV report said.

Trotman told investigators he was trying to teach the boy about the danger of electricity before the child seriously hurt himself.

Trotman was arrested Friday and booked into the Clay County Jail and held on $5,003 bond.

http://www.local6.com/2006/0814/9677738.jpg
Paul Trotman

And you were thinking I made this crap up, right? Laughing source
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Chai
 
  1  
Reply Wed 16 Aug, 2006 07:55 pm
Well, that'll teach him.

Bet he hasn't pissed in the toaster since then.
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Chai
 
  1  
Reply Wed 16 Aug, 2006 08:04 pm
OK I'm not saying what this guy did was right, but read the below....even 120V if the skin is dry is not lethal.



Amps vs. Volts
How many times have your heard that it's not the volts that'll kill you, but the amps? While mostly true (it takes only 100mA to stop your heart), amps and volts are eternally bound together by Ohm's Law:

V = IR
In plain English: volts (V) equals current (I) times resistance (R). So, assuming resistance is constant, voltage and current are in lockstep. As one goes up, so does the other, and vice versa. You can't have a lot of amps without a lot of volts.

So, back to which kills you, the amps or volts. Given your body is a constant resistance, it really is a combination of both. Higher voltage means higher amperage, and thus higher voltage has more potential to kill. It takes only 100mA to stop your heart. I believe the resistance of a person with dry skin is somewhere around 100,000 ohms. This means, even touching 120V is far from lethal. The probem is wet skin is around 1,000 ohms, and the inside of your body is even lower, thus making 120V potentially lethal. OSHA actually has a good page describing this (even if they resize your damn browser window). And here's another explanation of the biological effects of electric shock.

You also, of course, have to take the power supply into account. All power supplies, especially batteries, are far from ideal. As they supply current, the voltage drops. A standard 1.5V AA battery cannot source 1A for any sustained period of time (if at all), for example. That's what makes a 12V car battery a lot more powerful, than, say, 8 AA batteries. I sincerely doubt you could start your car with a pack of Duracells.

BTW, even a standard 9V battery can kill you. Don't believe me? It's happened in the Navy. And I've seen that story before, so I think it is actually true.

I also think that many people are injured or killed, not necessarily from direct contact with an electric shock, but the aftershock. For example, a television tube usually runs at somewhere around 20,000 volts. But, it doesn't have a lot of current capability. The voltage drops off quickly as it discharges (i.e. you touch it). So, even though the shock is not lethal, the involuntary muscle contractions can cause you to touch something else more dangerous. Perhaps something inside the TV (like the power supply), or maybe it'll through you off your chair and into something sharp in your workspace. Either way, the potential for injury is still significant.

Anyhow, that ends my rant on weather amps or volts will kill you. The truth of the matter is they are both dangerous in the right quantities and situation. So be careful around electricity!
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