Figured this making a high voltage fuse! WATCH THE VIDEO
It's interesting because under normal atmospheric pressures, the 2,000 volts can only start jumping under 1 mm. Gap But it jumps well over 10 cm in partial vacuum. Look at this nonsense. Oh my.
God So that was a failure.
HVALA ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
ElectroBOOM is a legend he does what we want to do or wanted to do
Mf gonna blow up earth one day
mehdi please not again we've seen what happened the last time
If he takes a shock it would be really bad…he knows this. That the difference between taking a hit from a couple caps versus a powerline….
When louis litt went to MIT instead of Harvard.
69th
Bro has survived 1835 days in hardcore
Does blud not know he is at 6 million subs😂
Broo my soul went to heaven when you said 2k volts
Goofy laugh bro 💀
Rocket Lab found this out the hard way last year. Their rocket engine uses high voltages and they didn't account for the fact that an arc can jump a long way as the pressure drops.
@ElectroBOOM Are @RealTech affiliated with your brand/channel or have they stolen your content?
موفق باشی مهدی ❤
Interestingly, under ultra high vaccum, the breakdown voltage for a given gap size goes way back up, past that of atmospheric conditions. This is because the electron accelerated by the high voltage of the electrode is less likely to hit some particle that can be ionized, which stops the avalanche breakdown required to form an arc. For a more detailed theoretical description of this, see the wikipedia article on "Paschen's curves".