Message from @GreenPixel
Discord ID: 596449606527877143
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True, once voltage goes across water, it ceases to be water and becomes 2 distinct gases, Hydrogen and Oxygen
You have unfinished business with the shape debate, Human Sheeple.
Happy fourth
'merica
for what it's worth
you mean the video that i posted ? @Steve Angell
Human sheeple exactly
Yes with Flanagan.
so one of you is against flanagan and the other likes him
this is gonna be interesting
He is correct about DC but not so correct on AC. Yes you can transmit it with powerlines a long way with minimal loss. But not near a thousand miles.
it's a 3hr long video so he says a lot of things
AC will just make heat or light
it won't electrolyze
pulsed DC will however
Pulsed DC is AC.
Nope wrong
Pulsed DC is commonly produced from AC (alternating current) by a half-wave rectifier or a full-wave rectifier.
AC involves going into negative voltage
pulse width modulation they have chips that do pulsed DC very easily nowadays
Alternating current. What the name means. Alternating from high to nothing and back to high is still alternating.
Generating DC. DC can be generated in a number of ways: An AC generator equipped with a device called a "commutator" can produce direct current. ... Batteries provide DC, which is generated from a chemical reaction inside of the battery.
no high positive to high negative
It reacts more like normal AC current than DC.
Alternating current is an electric current which periodically reverses direction, in contrast to direct current which flows only in one direction.
See @mineyful is smart
DC means direct current. Direct is not alternating between high and low.
Hold on is your original point of 1000miles being disputed here
Direct current is the unidirectional flow of an electric charge.
Yes. You can not transmit AC a thousand miles with minimal loss.
There is a huge loss at that distance.
Whenever power has to be transmitted over long distances, DC transmission is the most economical solution compared to high-voltage AC
so ye
I don't know enough about electricity tbh to debate this, but i watched that video years ago and i watched it for it's main topic which was water wasn't paying attention to other details
you know what I actually don't know either
I am barely into it. I am not disputing the video and his main point he has not gotten to in 12 minutes.
I have never heard of DC transmission for dozens of miles being effective or even possible.
well if you can stomach watching more into it then you can tell us any other anomalies you may pick up
From what I understood it was only three miles max and really limited mostly to a single mile.