When I was in my early teens I was working on some project or another, that used the mains power. I remember I was always unhooking and rehooking it as I worked on it so I ended up just using a mains cord with an inline switch, that ended in a pair of aligator clips.

At one point I had it all hooked up and wanted to show my parents my project, so I pushed the button and something I'd installed incorrectly on the project vaporized with the surge of AC power. Unknown to me, this surge also fused the switch contacts closed. Dissapointed I 'turned off' the switch and grabbed the aligator clips (one with each hand) to remove them from the circuit. That was my first introduction to 120VAC in one arm and out the other.

It didn't knock me out but I sure jumped, and it left both hands and forearms numb for about 15 minutes.

Oh and needless to say, the folks were very underwhelmed with my electronics skills. Happily they never did anything to try and put me off electronics, just encouraged me to be a little more careful.

My first exposure to elecricity though came when I was much younger, perhaps only about 5. I had a little record player and one time while plugging it in, I was holding the little 2-prong plug wrong. Basicaly my thumb was touching one prong and a finger touching the other prong. The player must have had a transformer or something that was hooked into the circuit because although I got some current, it was not the least bit uncomfortable. It felt like my whole hand was being massaged from the inside. Once I 'discovered' this, I did it again a number of times, as it was a bit of a kick. I know I showed the 'trick' to my sister but I'm pretty sure I never shared that with the parents - I didn't want them to take away the record player.

73 de
Stephanie
va3uxb

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