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And indirectly, it's a stretch.
A great many values are measured indirectly.
And since a bird is known to manually control only its legs, it flaps its wings purely by reflex,
Where are the 380 volts?
where the 220 is in the wires on the poles.
well: 380 is the voltage between any 2 phases.
To talk about birds and the non-hazardousness of 380 volts for them, you have to take a specimen and hook one paw on one phase and the other on the other.
Well, I don't. Secondly, they lie outrageously. None of them show an increase in gravity near mountain ranges, for example, or a decrease in the sea, and if they do, the measurements are tied to anything but gravity.
I was just... kidding about the gravity meter.)
Well, 380 is the voltage between any 2 phases.
To talk about birds and the non-hazardousness of 380 volts for them, you have to take a specimen and hook one foot on one phase and the other on the other.
You're an animal. Shame on you.
Some kind of animal. Shame on you.
It's not all for dogs and rats, we need to get the birds involved in science too!
Well, 380 is the voltage between any 2 phases.
To talk about birds and the non-hazardousness of 380 volts for them, you have to take a specimen and hook one foot on one phase and the other on the other.
Yes between two, but on each. 220v is a phase and a zero, so the voltage will be 380v, even if you insulate a person from the ground and then hold one wire with both hands - it will be fatal in the vast majority of cases (the exception is different resistance of different people, but there will still be an electric shock), but birds sit quietly with two legs on the wire.
Believe me, if a person hangs on an electric wire and doesn't touch anything else, they won't get an electric shock.