Reminds me of when I stuck tweezers into an AC outlet.  I guess that was my
start into Product Safety.

Now that I think of it, I also liked to see things explode.  It's probably
for the best that I didn't go into Chemical Engineering.

Just my thoughts as I head out for the weekend.

Sam
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
[mailto:owner-emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org]On Behalf Of Price, Ed
Sent: Friday, September 13, 2002 2:04 PM
To: <
Subject: RE: electricity and water




>-----Original Message-----
>From: Ted Rook [mailto:t...@crestaudio.com]
>Sent: Friday, September 13, 2002 8:05 AM
>To: <
>Subject: electricity and water
>
>
>
>my 2c
>
>The audience are children.
>
>Children do not even know what electricity is.
>
>This would seem to require education in more than one topic if
>it is to be understood by the children
>
>For example
>
>first: what is electricity? the difference between the wall
>outlet, the car battery and the overhead power lines.
>
>second: how does electricity travel from place to place? the
>concepts of conductors and insulators.
>
>third: why is electricity dangerous? electric shock, what is
>it? is the body a conductor or an insulator? are some parts of
>it are most sensitive to damage?
>
>fourth: why wet places and things are hazardous: water can
>change things from insulators to conductors eg wood, paper,
>cloth, skin.
>
>Good Luck
>
>Ted Rook
>


Ted:

All good points. You want to aim your pitch to 80% of the target audience.
So, to provide some atypical guideposts, I got a skip loader and excavated
some recollections of my early projects. When I was 4, my parents found that
I was able to defeat child-proof power outlets. At 7, I knew batteries and
motors worked better with copper wires than cotton strings. I was soldering
at age 10. At 11, I was doing electroplating. At 12, I was building kits
with tubes. And at 13, I learned about power dissipated in a load by
measuring the DC resistance of a big flashbulb. YMMV!

regards,

Ed



Ed Price
ed.pr...@cubic.com
Electromagnetic Compatibility Lab
Cubic Defense Systems
San Diego, CA  USA
858-505-2780  (Voice)
858-505-1583  (Fax)
Military & Avionics EMC Is Our Specialty
Shake-Bake-Shock - Metrology - Reliability Analysis

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