Message from @GreenPixel

Discord ID: 596449606527877143


2019-07-04 21:14:31 UTC  

?

2019-07-04 21:14:53 UTC  

True, once voltage goes across water, it ceases to be water and becomes 2 distinct gases, Hydrogen and Oxygen

2019-07-04 21:15:10 UTC  

You have unfinished business with the shape debate, Human Sheeple.

2019-07-04 21:15:33 UTC  

Happy fourth

2019-07-04 21:15:38 UTC  

'merica

2019-07-04 21:15:40 UTC  

for what it's worth

2019-07-04 21:15:48 UTC  

you mean the video that i posted ? @Steve Angell

2019-07-04 21:15:52 UTC  

Human sheeple exactly

2019-07-04 21:16:06 UTC  

Yes with Flanagan.

2019-07-04 21:16:22 UTC  

so one of you is against flanagan and the other likes him

2019-07-04 21:16:50 UTC  

this is gonna be interesting

2019-07-04 21:16:53 UTC  

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.

2019-07-04 21:16:56 UTC  

it's a 3hr long video so he says a lot of things

2019-07-04 21:17:02 UTC  

AC will just make heat or light

2019-07-04 21:17:06 UTC  

it won't electrolyze

2019-07-04 21:17:10 UTC  

pulsed DC will however

2019-07-04 21:17:25 UTC  

Pulsed DC is AC.

2019-07-04 21:17:29 UTC  

Nope wrong

2019-07-04 21:17:33 UTC  

Pulsed DC is commonly produced from AC (alternating current) by a half-wave rectifier or a full-wave rectifier.

2019-07-04 21:17:35 UTC  

AC involves going into negative voltage

2019-07-04 21:17:47 UTC  

Depends how you define pulsed

2019-07-04 21:17:59 UTC  

pulse width modulation they have chips that do pulsed DC very easily nowadays

2019-07-04 21:18:14 UTC  

Alternating current. What the name means. Alternating from high to nothing and back to high is still alternating.

2019-07-04 21:18:25 UTC  

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.

2019-07-04 21:18:27 UTC  

no high positive to high negative

2019-07-04 21:18:34 UTC  

It reacts more like normal AC current than DC.

2019-07-04 21:18:44 UTC  

Alternating current is an electric current which periodically reverses direction, in contrast to direct current which flows only in one direction.

2019-07-04 21:18:54 UTC  

See @mineyful is smart

2019-07-04 21:19:55 UTC  

DC means direct current. Direct is not alternating between high and low.

2019-07-04 21:19:57 UTC  

Hold on is your original point of 1000miles being disputed here

2019-07-04 21:20:21 UTC  

Direct current is the unidirectional flow of an electric charge.

2019-07-04 21:20:21 UTC  

Yes. You can not transmit AC a thousand miles with minimal loss.

2019-07-04 21:20:38 UTC  

There is a huge loss at that distance.

2019-07-04 21:20:47 UTC  

Whenever power has to be transmitted over long distances, DC transmission is the most economical solution compared to high-voltage AC

2019-07-04 21:20:55 UTC  

so ye

2019-07-04 21:21:04 UTC  

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

2019-07-04 21:21:29 UTC  

you know what I actually don't know either

2019-07-04 21:21:55 UTC  

I am barely into it. I am not disputing the video and his main point he has not gotten to in 12 minutes.

2019-07-04 21:22:32 UTC  

I have never heard of DC transmission for dozens of miles being effective or even possible.

2019-07-04 21:22:42 UTC  

well if you can stomach watching more into it then you can tell us any other anomalies you may pick up

2019-07-04 21:23:01 UTC  

From what I understood it was only three miles max and really limited mostly to a single mile.