What kills a person voltage or current?

Conclusion about the confusion of which one is hazardous, Current or Voltage?: Current Kills, Not the Voltage. But Voltage is must to drive the Current. I.e. Amperes are responsible for electrocution, Not the Volts. Warning: Both AC and DC voltages and currents are dangerous.
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Which is more fatal to human voltages or current Why?

An accidental shock can cause severe burns, damage to internal organs, and even death. 1 Interestingly, while most people think of electricity in terms of voltage, the most dangerous aspect of electrical shock is the amperage, not the voltage.
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What is the voltage to kill a human?

Assuming a steady current flow (as opposed to a shock from a capacitor or from static electricity), shocks above 2,700 volts are often fatal, with those above 11,000 volts being usually fatal, though exceptional cases have been noted.
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Does the voltage kill you?

In fact, its voltage will be high enough to overcome your skin's resistance. It can pass through your skin into your blood vessels. If the level of amps is high enough, it can do some serious damage to your body tissues. It could even kill you!
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Can current kill a person?

The highest currents (more than one amp) cause burns through resistive heating as the current passes through the body. If this path crosses the heart or brain, then the burn may be fatal.
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Which is the Killer, Current or Voltage?



Will 240 volts kill you?

An electric shock from a 240 volt power point can kill you, but on a dry day your car door can zap you with 10,000 volts and just make you swear.
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Can 48v DC kill you?

Under normal circumstances with dry skin 48 Volts would probably wake you up but not kill you. When the the electrical current is strong enough to burn away the layer of skin and fat and comes in contact with the tissue directly below this layer it is extremely conductive then even relative low voltages can be lethal.
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Can 5 amps kill you?

Heart paralysis occurs at 4 amps, which means the heart does not pump at all. Tissue is burned with currents greater than 5 amps.
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Would 10000 volts kill you Jurassic Park?

The electric fences required at least 10,000 volts of voltage to contain the dinosaurs properly, this is an assumption, as mention is made about whether or not direct current or alternating current was used. Also, it should be noted that it is in fact amperage, not voltage, that can lead to death by electrocution.
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Can you survive 10000 volts?

Dr. Michael S. Morse, a professor of electrical engineering at the University of San Diego, explains that while 10,000 volts can be life threatening in certain circumstances, it's possible for something to have 10,000 volts behind it and be relatively harmless.
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Which is more harmful voltage or current?

Higher voltage allows for the production of higher, more dangerous currents. Resistance opposes current, making high resistance a good protective measure against shock. Any voltage above 30 is generally considered to be capable of delivering dangerous shock currents.
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What happens if you get shocked by 480 volts?

Exposure to high voltage electricity (greater than 500 volts) has the potential to result in serious tissue damage. Serious electrical shock injuries usually have an entrance and exit site on the body because the individual becomes part of the electrical circuit.
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How many volts does a lightning bolt have?

A typical lightning flash is about 300 million Volts and about 30,000 Amps. In comparison, household current is 120 Volts and 15 Amps.
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Can a 12 volts battery electrocute you?

While a car battery has enough amperage (electrical power) to kill you, it doesn't have enough voltage (electrical force – to push the electrons through your body). Your body is just not conductive enough to be fried by 12 volts. Ray: If you were made of metal, 12 volts would crisp your circuits.
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How much electricity can a human body generate?

Theory. The average human, at rest, produces around 100 watts of power. [2] Over periods of a few minutes, humans can comfortably sustain 300-400 watts; and in the case of very short bursts of energy, such as sprinting, some humans can output over 2,000 watts.
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Can 12 volts DC kill?

Simply put, voltage can be thought of as “pressure,” so while a car battery may technically have enough amperage to kill you, the paltry 12 volts DC simply doesn't provide enough pressure to push any significant amount of amperage through the contact resistance of your skin.
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Can 12V 2A kill you?

To make it easy: 1- Car battery 12V (hundreds of Amps) will not kill you. Laptop charger 20V 7A will not kill you. Therefore, the 5V 2A will not kill you also.
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Can 12V AC kill you?

12 volts DC is not a shock hazard.

You can't touch the wires in your 120V AC household electrical system without getting a nasty, dangerous shock, but you can touch bare wires carrying 12V DC in your car, even lay your hands across the positive and negative 12V battery terminals, without risk of electrocution.
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Will 110v kill you?

Even contact with standard 110-volt circuits can be lethal under certain conditions. Hand-to-hand, hand- or head-to-foot, and ear-to-ear current paths are the most dangerous because they may cause severe damage to the heart, lungs and brain.
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Will 24V kill you?

There's naught deadly in voltage, it's the wattage that electrocutes you. In fact, if you want to be precise, it is the current (Amps) that kills you. The reason why 24V isn't nearly as deadly is because at the resistance your skin normally has the current will be low enough that it does not get dangerous.
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Does 120v kill?

Ordinary, household, 120 volts AC electricity is dangerous and it can kill. to flow in a circuit. Electrical current involves the flow of electrons and it's measured in amps.
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Can a light switch kill you?

There are usually two main types of shock from light switches, static or electric. The static shock is due to electricity build up on the skin. Electric shock is due to electrical leakage from the switch. Static shocks are harmless while electric shocks can be fatal.
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Why 110v is safer than 220v?

Thus, higher current can be more dangerous than higher voltage; however, since voltage and amperage are directly proportional (in conditions that offer the same resistance), 110v wiring is usually considered safer to work with because it uses fewer volts and as such can only carry half as much current as 220v wiring.
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Is lightning hotter than the sun?

In fact, lightning can heat the air it passes through to 50,000 degrees Fahrenheit (5 times hotter than the surface of the sun). When lightning strikes a tree, the heat vaporizes any water in its path possibly causing the tree to explode or a strip of bark to be blown off.
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Why can't we harness lightning?

The problem is that the energy in lightning is contained in a very short period of time, only a few microseconds. Further, to obtain that 1 million joules, one would have to handle a voltage of several million volts.
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