> Let's not be obtuse on purpose, David.


No amount of dancing is going to turn this into a design that is safe by any 
reasonable definition of the word.
"Safe" in terms of "it hasn't killed anyone yet" is probably true.
"Safe" in terms of "you can trust this device not to cause a fire", no.


To quote from the page:
There are no safety worries about voltage, current or power, about frequency, 
shock or shorting. Worst-case current is only 60 µA so you can use thin digital 
wire to connect the plug to the microcontroller. One wire goes to Vss (signal 
ground) and the other to the microcontroller digital or analog input pin. If it 
doesn't work the first time, swap plug polarity. Or use capacitive coupling on 
both wires.

Of course, the whole idea of this AC plug is unnerving at first but when you 
think about it, it makes sense. Better yet, just make one and test it for 
yourself. You should observe it tickles far less than a 9V battery (which I 
measured to be about 200 µA on a wet tongue). 



Does that last line actually suggest checking this contraption BY TOUCHING IT 
TO YOUR TONGUE???

"No safety worries about voltage...or shorting" ??  Resistors can and do fail 
shorted. They can also be damaged by line voltage transients and end up at some 
lower value.

What version of "safe" applies here?
_______________________________________________
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.

Reply via email to