Yes it will the wrench will become litterally liquid and spray. So no it doesn't explode in the litteral sense but it appears to and also sounds like it:). A safe experiment to do which many people probably did as Kids is to take a piece of tin foil and place it across the terminals of say a trainset transformer or perhaps a 6 V drycell battery that you set up with a proper switch so you can switch on the flow when you are standing back. The foil will sizzle and pop used to be the way you could demonstrate how fuses worked. Imagine that but this time the wrench handle goes pop. ----- Original Message ----- From: "David Diaz" <techlist@smoton.net> To: <wb8foz@nrk.com>; "nanog list" <nanog@merit.edu> Sent: Sunday, December 29, 2002 5:45 PM Subject: Re: DC power versus AC power
While I would normally think some of this exaggeration. When I was at Netrail, I did a road trip to upgrade a facility in DC. It's kinda amazing what passed for colo in those days. The little UPS actually had a string of Pet boys car batteries. Nathan Estes dropped a wrench into the battery bay and there was a nice explosion according to him. The wrench literally vaporized. Now I said that wasnt possible. He will stick to his story to this day.
The only thing I could figure was that it literally moltified into super small droplets and just sprayed. Regardless of whether it's completely accurate, he was out searching for another wrench... it took a lot of chocolate mile to relax him after that.
At 20:11 -0500 12/29/02, David Lesher wrote:
Unnamed Administration sources reported that Scott Granados said:
Is 48V DC at the amps present normallyin switch rooms etc enough to
cause
electricucian? I have seen bad things with wrenches dropped across batteries even 12 volt car batteries although in this case it was a large battery bank in a submarine but I was curious about the 48V sources in switch rooms.
Electrocution is but one way to die from too many columbs. Internal burning is a big one. Most people die, not from immediate cardiac arrest, but rather from kidney/spleen/liver failure as they try to remove the cooked you parts from your bloodstream, and clog up. (First responder treatment is multiple saline inputs to flush you out, and keep flushing you. This via a friend who was "lit" and lived.)
The instantaneous short circuit current available from a CO-grade battery string is nothing short of frightening. It will easily turn a 18" crescent wrench bright orange and start spitting the molten metal around within few seconds.
I'm surprised you're still around after a sub battery accident. They're a grade up from most CO's in available current, I'd bet.
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