Why don't birds get electrocuted on power lines?

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  • Опубликовано: 23 авг 2024

Комментарии • 4,2 тыс.

  • @Interestingengineeringofficial
    @Interestingengineeringofficial  5 месяцев назад +1

    ⚙ Want to know more about the latest tech and innovations? Don’t Miss Out!
    *SUBSCRIBE & HIT THE BELL* 👉bit.ly/SubscribeNowIE

  • @ezekieldujambi8427
    @ezekieldujambi8427 2 года назад +1471

    Respect for the bird who took part in the demonstration in the name of science. She will be retweeted.

  • @johndoe123xyz
    @johndoe123xyz 2 года назад +1153

    2:56 for those of you wondering why these guys are touching two wires and are still alive, the wires are at the same potential. This is a three-phase circuit with 2 wires per phase, and the two wires conduct the exact same current with the exact same voltage, so it's basically like touching two different parts of a very thick wire

    • @woodenseagull1899
      @woodenseagull1899 2 года назад +8

      Jou are taking this too seriously...!

    • @primitivochapa5877
      @primitivochapa5877 2 года назад +1

      True

    • @sergiolerma6069
      @sergiolerma6069 2 года назад +2

      Same potential

    • @minerran
      @minerran 2 года назад +17

      Three phase voltages are not the same potential, they are each 60 degrees out of phase so you are wrong. If the bird is standing on two wires simultaneously which I doubt (birds are small and wires are never placed only inches apart with thousands of volts on them) then the wires are probably not hot, maybe ground wires, cable or something else. If you touch two wires of a three phase system on a power pole, you'd be going to see the angels, so would a bird!

    • @johndoe123xyz
      @johndoe123xyz 2 года назад +75

      @@minerran he's not touching two different phases, he's touching two wires of the same phase, there are 6 wires total

  • @caryd67
    @caryd67 Год назад +151

    I can still remember being really young, maybe 4 or 5, walking with my grandma and asking her, “why can the birds sit on the wire?” Her reply: “they have special feet.”

    • @joelwilliams3790
      @joelwilliams3790 Год назад +8

      Was thinking down the same line. GOD made them UNIQUE.

    • @johnsheetz6639
      @johnsheetz6639 Год назад

      😆!

    • @bamf6603
      @bamf6603 Год назад +2

      i know old people relating everything with god

    • @JBofBrisbane
      @JBofBrisbane Год назад +4

      Translation: I don't know either, young'un!

    • @caryd67
      @caryd67 Год назад

      @@bamf6603 I know, right?

  • @slashine1071
    @slashine1071 Год назад +56

    As a bird, this safety video has been very informative.

    • @leoncorbett4553
      @leoncorbett4553 Год назад +1

      You’re not real

    • @josorr
      @josorr Год назад +3

      I'm going to go out on a limb (no pun intended) and guess that you typed your comment using the "hunt and peck" method.

    • @CurlyFromTheSwirly
      @CurlyFromTheSwirly 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@josorr,
      No, they have their hooman servants type for them.

  • @mr.unknown2447
    @mr.unknown2447 4 года назад +13836

    They dont get electrocuted because they are flying robots that recharge by sitting on power lines

    • @zachb8012
      @zachb8012 3 года назад +395

      This is exactly where I thought the video was going in the first 30 seconds. "What magical ability do they have?"

    • @3bigbignig-abandoned
      @3bigbignig-abandoned 3 года назад +647

      Yes. Because they are government drones.

    • @TheExoticCerdos
      @TheExoticCerdos 3 года назад +77

      @@3bigbignig-abandoned sure.... 😂

    • @3bigbignig-abandoned
      @3bigbignig-abandoned 3 года назад +99

      @@TheExoticCerdos 😂

    • @padraigrab08
      @padraigrab08 3 года назад +15

      Lol

  • @highconnery472
    @highconnery472 3 года назад +517

    Imagine being this badass sitting on powerlines and shitting on humans

    • @anmol7060
      @anmol7060 3 года назад +14

      I can only dream

    • @brandonbeard8488
      @brandonbeard8488 3 года назад +3

      😄😂😂

    • @highconnery472
      @highconnery472 3 года назад +22

      @Zephyrean is that all you got? And stop liking your own comment ffs

    • @ReviloAnimations
      @ReviloAnimations 3 года назад +11

      @@highconnery472 watch out, hes the type of guy to correct a youtube comment due to one mistake

    • @shreejitparmar339
      @shreejitparmar339 3 года назад +6

      @@highconnery472 Nice name

  • @nobodyimportant4778
    @nobodyimportant4778 2 года назад +151

    Note: while electrons do move between the power source and your device, if you had to wait for them to travel that whole distance to get a charge, you would be waiting a very, very long time.
    Instead, the energy comes from the electrons already inside your device being accelerated by the electric field.
    The circuit simply decides the shape and size of the electric field

    • @PaulTeller-kj1cn
      @PaulTeller-kj1cn Год назад +6

      shocking!

    • @mikemacdonald2032
      @mikemacdonald2032 Год назад

      A/c current flows at 60 times throughout the sinewave per second....aka 60 hertz ...so that's not really a long time

    • @nobodyimportant4778
      @nobodyimportant4778 Год назад +17

      @@mikemacdonald2032 that's not the rate of electrons passing through the current...

    • @transistorsloop
      @transistorsloop Год назад +2

      Also i have a question!
      If the birds sit on the same wire with equal potential so the charges do no flow through their body
      So can I also sit on the same live wire and do not get shock? Since i am sitting on same potential wire too...

    • @nobodyimportant4778
      @nobodyimportant4778 Год назад +5

      @@transistorsloop a bird sitting on a power line is safe because it's only touching the wire. If it were to peck the wooden post while sitting on the wire, the bird would be treated as part of the circuit, causing the electrons in its body to move and electrocuting it.
      This happens because the electrons "bump" into its atoms and transfer energy to them.
      If an electric wire could hold a human's weight, it would still be very difficult for someone to climb onto it without touching anything else at the same time, but not impossible.

  • @AmericanOne9621
    @AmericanOne9621 Год назад +42

    I worked for a local power company for 30 years before I retired 3 years ago. I can say yes the bucket trucks are insulated from the bucket to about 15 foot down the neck. I can also say that you will feel a shock though minor if you touch the wire without high voltage gloves on.

    • @terrylandess6072
      @terrylandess6072 Год назад +4

      Thanks for your selfless work when storms hit and everyone is crying.

    • @AmericanOne9621
      @AmericanOne9621 Год назад +7

      @@terrylandess6072 Now that I have retired I've joined the cry babies...ha!

    • @HighStakesDanny
      @HighStakesDanny Год назад +2

      How do you know which wire to fix in Manila Philippines?

    • @AmericanOne9621
      @AmericanOne9621 Год назад +2

      @@HighStakesDanny I'm not familiar with the equipment Manila has such as fuses, fault finders which hangs on the line. The easiest way is to see the wire broken (mostly falling trees here) and laying on the ground with the fuse barrel open. (hanging down).

  • @senor1928
    @senor1928 3 года назад +1600

    I love how they straight up showed us a clip of a bird getting electrocuted.

    • @jibbymarket
      @jibbymarket 3 года назад +27

      He just said. pce

    • @jaydenfrancis6467
      @jaydenfrancis6467 3 года назад +8

      Was that not from the wires touching each other

    • @RonanTetsu
      @RonanTetsu 3 года назад +65

      @@jaydenfrancis6467 They still got electrocuted lol. While most people don't know why birds don't get shocked they also don't know how birds would get shocked.

    • @jaydenfrancis6467
      @jaydenfrancis6467 3 года назад +6

      @@RonanTetsu I didn't take that in tbh

    • @kennyc388
      @kennyc388 3 года назад +41

      That bird was dead quicker than instantly !

  • @nairzD
    @nairzD 3 года назад +2055

    I feel so bad for laughing at that bird that just went drop

    • @sillycheese301
      @sillycheese301 3 года назад +48

      Same lol

    • @TheDamnoranges
      @TheDamnoranges 3 года назад +29

      Same, lmao.

    • @GraveUypo
      @GraveUypo 3 года назад +205

      don't worry, it survived. got stunned but flew away in less than half a minute
      ruclips.net/video/p8HUj37nEJY/видео.html

    • @MultiGEARS117
      @MultiGEARS117 3 года назад +23

      @@GraveUypo thx

    • @chiefdenis
      @chiefdenis 3 года назад +18

      @@GraveUypo i thought it was lights out for sure

  • @MasterSluggyKornNuts
    @MasterSluggyKornNuts Год назад +4

    At a semiconductor plant where I worked a maintenance worker didn't put the lockout/tagout on the switch while he was working. A coworker turned it on and one of his arms got fried as the current moved through his body his other arm and one of his legs blew apart. Bless him he died from his injuries after 3 days and a couple of people got fired.

  • @reueljacques
    @reueljacques Год назад +3

    I suffered and survived 3 massive electrical discharges at the Washington DC VA hospital. I lost memory of the event for 4 years, lucky to be alive!!!

    • @sandasturner9529
      @sandasturner9529 3 месяца назад

      Wow! Can't imagine how much that hurts 🤕!!!!
      The most I can relate to is that I've been discharged from a hospital in 2022!!!
      Hope you have recovered well!!!!🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉

  • @scooterbum4288
    @scooterbum4288 3 года назад +842

    In the 50s, as a boy I knew of a farmer that was a self taught electrician. He did odd jobs for farmers in the area. He would always show up for the job with a case of beer, which he would stand on while working. In those days they were made of heavy duty cardboard and glass bottles which you would return for credit. He said it made a very good insulator and you could always drink the beer.
    When sizing up a large job he would say "Well, thats a lot of beer!"

    • @mattmoore2304
      @mattmoore2304 3 года назад +62

      Legend

    • @Bandicoot803
      @Bandicoot803 3 года назад +65

      He's right regarding the bottles as insulators: They're even in use today since 1745 as "Leyden Jars" which are excellent capacitors for high voltage appliances. They are extremely sturdy against high voltage, made out of cheap material and don't degrade over time unlike electrolytic capacitors which tent to bloat'n'blow.
      Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leyden_jar

    • @hypyeasv2667
      @hypyeasv2667 3 года назад +14

      What a god

    • @WISHBONEL7
      @WISHBONEL7 3 года назад +10

      "" Miller Time ""

    • @quickfixengineeringltd8035
      @quickfixengineeringltd8035 3 года назад +14

      How was life in the 50s without smart phones sir. Do you think humans were smarter? Better in arithmetic or had better memory than now. Do you think smart phones made us dummies comparably. What would you say changed?

  • @barry7607
    @barry7607 3 года назад +1808

    Because they always pay their "bill" on time ?

  • @priatalat
    @priatalat 2 года назад +8

    Workers who repair power lines are literally heroes

  • @Den1seQu0ta
    @Den1seQu0ta 3 года назад +387

    idk why I thought he was gonna say "To understand that, we must first become one with the birds."

    • @donutello_
      @donutello_ 3 года назад +19

      I thought he was gonna say "to understand that, we need to talk about parallel universes."

    • @hanac5586
      @hanac5586 3 года назад +6

      Sounds like a working method

    • @shane9245
      @shane9245 3 года назад +2

      @@donutello_ **vsauce music starts**

    • @Robby4291
      @Robby4291 3 года назад +1

      IDK , according to FORREST GUMP..."STUPID IS AS STUPID DOES". YOU QUALIFY. "Den1se".

    • @ireallyreallyhategoogle
      @ireallyreallyhategoogle 2 года назад +1

      It would have made more sense than the error filled science talk that followed.

  • @38SRI
    @38SRI 3 года назад +837

    I was here from the video - "Birds make transformer explode in *Houston*"

  • @tgclva6751
    @tgclva6751 Год назад +18

    The electrons don't travel from the power plant to your house, that would be the case if it were DC (direct current) which is bad for long distances, instead it's AC (Alternating Current) meaning the electrons move back and forth in the wire (like you would use a saw)

    • @oriraykai3610
      @oriraykai3610 Год назад +1

      The waves of voltage travel across the ocean of electrons in the wire just like the waves on the surface of the ocean.

    • @in4327-0
      @in4327-0 Год назад +1

      So each wire has its own AC wave?

    • @Ignisan_66
      @Ignisan_66 Год назад +4

      DC is not bad for long distances (its actually better, look up high voltage DC lines), DC is only harder to transform to a higher or lower voltage, AC can be transformed using transformers which is the main reason why AC is used.

  • @aaron32118
    @aaron32118 2 года назад +114

    Crypto currency is gradually moving towards something big and the price surge over the past few months is just the beginning of greater things to come. you got any advice for someone that is fresh to crypto. Don't know where to start..

    • @ladyp4674
      @ladyp4674 2 года назад

      The reason behind my profit earning in bitcoin is not solely on my skills but by the. help and guidance of Expert Beatrice O Wendy.

    • @williamschristopher7405
      @williamschristopher7405 2 года назад

      Hello everyone, I'm new to Biticon trade and I've been making losses but recently I see a lot of people earning from it.

    • @williamschristopher7405
      @williamschristopher7405 2 года назад

      @kura Zanna I have been trading offshore I'm still yet to earn my first $50, what strategy do you use please?

    • @geraldvincent6534
      @geraldvincent6534 2 года назад

      @@williamschristopher7405 that was my case till I came across Beatrice O Wendy.

    • @geraldvincent6534
      @geraldvincent6534 2 года назад

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  • @dunkelheitserval4764
    @dunkelheitserval4764 3 года назад +3684

    I'll remember this when i become a bird

    • @trakan7971
      @trakan7971 3 года назад +35

      Here at 15 likes. I'm the 15th

    • @adambruins
      @adambruins 3 года назад +22

      Me too i plan to become one with the doves one day and fly off into oblivion

    • @HappyFarm-db
      @HappyFarm-db 3 года назад +4

      HSHSHJKAGAHAJHAJAHSJAHSJWDKA

    • @Muhaiz
      @Muhaiz 3 года назад +62

      good luck bro, I was a bird too before I got reincarnate into this ugly human being. My life was so much fun, hope you will too :)

    • @Rwdsach
      @Rwdsach 3 года назад +8

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @MrBrightXCVI
    @MrBrightXCVI 3 года назад +2085

    Thanks for this informative video.

    • @primuse.x.e6141
      @primuse.x.e6141 3 года назад +1

      Hello there

    • @ShiratoriIsOffline
      @ShiratoriIsOffline 3 года назад

      Greetings

    • @JoblessMusic
      @JoblessMusic 3 года назад +7

      Thank you for thanking them for this informative video.

    • @dylanh609
      @dylanh609 3 года назад +6

      @@JoblessMusic thank you for thanking them for thanking them for this informative video

    • @vexture2466
      @vexture2466 3 года назад +5

      @@dylanh609 thank you for thanking them for thanking them for thanking them for this informative video.

  • @jamesmooney8933
    @jamesmooney8933 2 года назад +3

    Yes, as an Electrician I have touched 120v electrical lines, but there are some tricks involved.
    First you can be grounded. Electricians never used aluminum ladders because aluminum conducts electricity, and would ground you. Electrician use fiberglass ladders, which don't conduct electricity.
    Also you don't touch the other 120v line or the neutral line.

    • @antonkemperjr4128
      @antonkemperjr4128 2 года назад

      The outlets in American homes are 120v three wires hot, neutral, and ground. Don't play with electric a small current can stop your heat instantly. Then elec. stoves, HVAC, Clothes Dryer, water heaters use 240v. Again if you don't know much about it do not play with electric it can kill

    • @jamesmooney8933
      @jamesmooney8933 2 года назад

      @@antonkemperjr4128 The secret is to learn. Always work with one hand, when you think the wire might be hot. Why? because if one hand is ground and the other is touching a hot wire then the current goes thru you heart.
      220v is 120v +120v, there is no neutral on 220v, but the 120v conductor must be on another phase.
      This gets a little complicated. You have to study about phases.
      At the power plant, the generator has 3 phases or 3 taps

  • @No_BS_policy
    @No_BS_policy 2 года назад +1

    In short:
    Electricity is a term used to describe the flow of electrons through a medium with either a uniform electrical potential or a different electrical potential. When a conductor that is not attached to something else touches a medium having uniform electrical potential, the flow of electrons remains within the loop as there is no other electrical potential to travel to. But if a conductor is, say, attached to the ground, then electricity will flow from the higher potential to the lower potential through it.

  • @Sojourner7367
    @Sojourner7367 3 года назад +131

    someone argued with me that the bird had rubber boots.

    • @MohsinExperiments
      @MohsinExperiments 3 года назад +6

      Their skin is less conductive than humans.

    • @sandippaul468
      @sandippaul468 3 года назад +1

      Yes that's true.

    • @yitsous2
      @yitsous2 26 дней назад

      @@MohsinExperimentsbut still get electrocuted when they touch both life and neutral together

  • @floofiekun1875
    @floofiekun1875 3 года назад +221

    2:18 Props for using that Home Alone clip

    • @CeilingFanVideosOnYT
      @CeilingFanVideosOnYT 3 года назад +6

      I noticed that too! He eventually won a prize for robbing! A free ride in a police car!

    • @aperson6863
      @aperson6863 3 года назад +2

      @fucku weebsnfurries woah there partner! You can't tell someone on the internet to change their pfp just because you, a non weeb, doesn't like anime.

    • @aperson6863
      @aperson6863 3 года назад +1

      @fucku weebsnfurries not all weebs are coomers and not all of them watch 🐔👔 ... Only a devoted and extremely lonely few turn into coomers who can't stop watching the *hen* wearing a *tie.*
      Also, not everyone likes 'murican and european shows.

    • @aperson6863
      @aperson6863 3 года назад +4

      @fucku weebsnfurries ah... I see...
      You're a troll!
      No wonder you have that absurdly long about page.

  • @crestonperry2891
    @crestonperry2891 2 года назад +2

    This video gave me a total appreciation for bird 🐦 brain information.

  • @blakespower
    @blakespower 3 года назад +2

    in Maryland we have ospreys all over the place on cell towers on top of wooden electrical lines , they used to be just in the bay on specially designed platforms for them now they are growing in population

  • @frstnme316
    @frstnme316 3 года назад +963

    "They still need to make sure they only touch one wire at a time though"
    Next clip:
    *electricians crawling on two wires at a time*

    • @kth66
      @kth66 3 года назад +28

      I noticed it too

    • @Wishuk112
      @Wishuk112 3 года назад +8

      ikr

    • @matthewkuhl79
      @matthewkuhl79 3 года назад +206

      Those are parallel conductors of the same phase - no difference in potential.

    • @frstnme316
      @frstnme316 3 года назад +101

      @@matthewkuhl79 thanks for that, figured there was some reason behind it and it was safe... just kinda bad timing with the edit for those who are not in the know lol

    • @matthewkuhl79
      @matthewkuhl79 3 года назад +25

      @@frstnme316 i don't consider it _safe,_ but safe in the sense of getting shocked i guess. Medium voltage and above terrifies me 😬

  • @Flopshop123
    @Flopshop123 3 года назад +325

    That's cool and all but is no one gonna talk about the poor bird at 1:31

    • @reigningtoast5503
      @reigningtoast5503 3 года назад +10

      I feel bad for laughing at the bird

    • @cosmickitty3720
      @cosmickitty3720 3 года назад +9

      Dont feel bad its alive

    • @stighma
      @stighma 3 года назад +30

      @RainFall how does feeling bad for a bird getting electrocuted relate to veganism? There is literally no mention of eating meat or birds in the video or this comment

    • @ChampaRealLordChampa
      @ChampaRealLordChampa 3 года назад +21

      I watched the full video, it was stunned for a bit but flew off perfectly fine

    • @kati3514
      @kati3514 3 года назад +17

      @@stighma person they replied to probably deleted their comments. They commented a month ago too. :|

  • @sailingaway7170
    @sailingaway7170 2 года назад +7

    Very interesting. I have always been scared that they will get electrocuted when I see them on power Lines.

  • @ashfakuddinahmed1807
    @ashfakuddinahmed1807 Год назад +2

    0:53 It's just completely wrong. Electrons move from lower electrical potential to a higher one, not the other way around. It's true that the movement of electrons is what makes the current flow. But the general convention is that the current flows opposite to the flow of elections i.e. current flows from higher potential to a lower one. If electrons moved from higher potential to a lower one, then that would make the higher potential negatively charged. But in reality, it's always the positively charged terminal that has the higher potential.

  • @BillyMcBillface
    @BillyMcBillface 3 года назад +250

    I remember watching a squirrel running along a wire in elementary school. It went near the pole and all the sudden a big smoky flash and he fell to the street. Knocked out power to a few blocks! We had to stay outside because the school wouldn’t let us in without working lights. We had like a 1 hour lunch break, it was sick

  • @curiouslyt2123
    @curiouslyt2123 3 года назад +43

    Wow! The best explanation of how electricity flows for anyone who didn’t work with it.The more you know about something, the less scary it is and more predictable but electricity is still one of those things you MUST respect no matter how much you think you know about it.

    • @thebreifcaseman269
      @thebreifcaseman269 2 года назад +3

      Electricity doesent flow in power lines its from what ive read the electromagnetic field created when the circuit is conected that allows the energy dto flow.

    • @QuantumFirefly
      @QuantumFirefly Год назад

      @@thebreifcaseman269 That's right, the video has it all wrong in that respect. Electrons don't flow the way described.

  • @HeiMiBR
    @HeiMiBR Год назад +14

    I actually saw a pigeon got electrocuted by powerlines on a rainy day, probably the raindrops from its flapping wings caused it to connect to 2 lines at once. The sparks and noises were quite phenomenal.

    • @killtie15
      @killtie15 Год назад +7

      Sweet, a dinner AND a show!

    • @fosminclorin
      @fosminclorin Год назад +3

      ​@@killtie15 that's what my cat would think

    • @rustydowd879
      @rustydowd879 Год назад +2

      I once saw a squirrel bridge two wires. I remember a loud pop and it fell to the ground dead as a door nail. Didn't even twitch.

  • @ironjohn5914
    @ironjohn5914 2 года назад +2

    I seen a bird one day and it was sitting on a wire I stopped looked up at it and started to talk to it we had one of the greatest conversations ever!

    • @dang48
      @dang48 3 месяца назад +1

      I heard about this on Twitter. The bird gave you a positive review in its tweet.

  • @aronsumisu6173
    @aronsumisu6173 3 года назад +113

    1:33 the way the bird folded 💀

  • @morie8347
    @morie8347 3 года назад +250

    Yo i literally watched that bird that bites the electrical wire a minute ago

  • @rodneycooperjr3223
    @rodneycooperjr3223 Год назад +1

    I love videos that attract intelligent conversations, rather than a bunch of trolls looking for a stranger to fight with.

  • @j.h.6081
    @j.h.6081 2 года назад +3

    I was sad to hear a Canada Goose fly into a power line once. The sound was so loud, my friend, me, and other people crossing the street were very startled. It was sad to see the goose loose its struggle once he or she was on the ground. There was what looked like a burned hole in the bird's chest. That's a completely different scenario from your video but it was really startling.

  • @nanofate8662
    @nanofate8662 3 года назад +151

    An information video that gets straight to the point while remaining under 10 mins. You earned a sub, sir.

    • @yell0wberry
      @yell0wberry Год назад +1

      Now I see why electricians who work for the city get paid as much as $100 an hour just on straight time

  • @jesusyamatotv3099
    @jesusyamatotv3099 3 года назад +403

    One day this will be in everyone's recommended and it'll get like 2+ million views over night.

  • @mariooimet2527
    @mariooimet2527 2 месяца назад

    They use those high-voltage lines to keep feet warm in the winter. However, if the line happens to be not live in the winter, it can instantly freeze them stuck on it.

  • @dsjenzen
    @dsjenzen 2 года назад +3

    In my country, civet cats usually climb and travel via the wires in urban areas. They never seemed to get electrocuted as well.

    • @evilsharkey8954
      @evilsharkey8954 Год назад +1

      A lot of those wires are communications cables, not electric wires

    • @TheMrPeteChannel
      @TheMrPeteChannel Год назад

      @@evilsharkey8954 and they are insulated.

  • @HeavenlyCelestia
    @HeavenlyCelestia 3 года назад +363

    Very informative video, surprised this doesn't have more views.

    • @foxsaysnani7712
      @foxsaysnani7712 3 года назад +4

      It doesn’t have more views because it takes the brain of a cow to understand the concept.

    • @ambalavanant
      @ambalavanant 3 года назад +7

      There is your answer. It's informative. That's why less views

    • @uncontrollablyrage19
      @uncontrollablyrage19 3 года назад +2

      Realy informative video, it answered allnmy questions.

    • @keneleven-11
      @keneleven-11 3 года назад

      Because we already know.

    • @N9TheNoob
      @N9TheNoob 3 года назад +1

      how do you not know this?!??

  • @Wil_Dasovich
    @Wil_Dasovich 3 года назад +750

    Interesting

  • @TheRoswellCode
    @TheRoswellCode Год назад +1

    How heavy birds with small wings can fly up to power lines in the first place is more intriguing.

    • @CurlyFromTheSwirly
      @CurlyFromTheSwirly 11 месяцев назад +1

      Or how hummingbirds can stay in the same spot

  • @MrSqwertery
    @MrSqwertery Год назад +1

    When the birds are young their feet are dipped in Rubber ...😂😂😂

  • @CG64Mushro0m
    @CG64Mushro0m 3 года назад +81

    1:33 from alive to dead in a second
    edit: i saw the longer version of the video, it actually didn't die, it was stunned

    • @aryandeep
      @aryandeep 3 года назад +2

      @Onkar Jadhav i found that hilarious

    • @richie3602
      @richie3602 3 года назад +3

      there are two types of people in the world

    • @aryandeep
      @aryandeep 3 года назад

      @@richie3602 bro im not cold. i just find it funny, the way it fell down.

    • @haseebejaz
      @haseebejaz 3 года назад

      Poor bird.

    • @CG64Mushro0m
      @CG64Mushro0m 3 года назад +1

      @@haseebejaz don't worry, it probably didn't feel a thing

  • @doudymac
    @doudymac 3 года назад +21

    1:31 Bird: Aight imma head out. 💀⚰️

  • @TheMultialdo2009
    @TheMultialdo2009 2 года назад +1

    The house where I grew up had a power line in back. On several occasions a bird sitting on the wire or the transformer got electrocuted and landed in our back yard.

  • @TheSilverSurfisher
    @TheSilverSurfisher Год назад

    @ 2:30..."Hello Mr. George...yeah, I'm the new guy....the Old guy just quit...and me too"!

  • @Mikey-ym6ok
    @Mikey-ym6ok 3 года назад +34

    2:30 these guys are masters beyond measure. They have balls of steel.

    • @Robby4291
      @Robby4291 3 года назад +1

      YOU have brains of OATMEAL....

    • @vanhattfield8292
      @vanhattfield8292 2 года назад +2

      Maybe, but more likely balls of a less conductive substance, lol.

  • @nafets6265
    @nafets6265 3 года назад +20

    This is the most ask question during the first week of semester in an Electrical/Mechanical Engineering degree course

  • @whoeverwhoever400
    @whoeverwhoever400 2 года назад +1

    The real question is, how do most birds know to keep both feet on the same line and not touch anywhere else?
    Of course, there are always a few dumb ones or accident. But you don’t see that often.

  • @Zachary-uk6xp
    @Zachary-uk6xp 5 дней назад

    That’s cool how birds don’t get shocked in the wire. Well, maybe the pole is dangerous.

  • @abhaysingh8345
    @abhaysingh8345 3 года назад +12

    A must watch video for all the birds,
    Pet owners should educate their birds to spread awareness

  • @LivingWithTheGuzmans
    @LivingWithTheGuzmans 3 года назад +333

    Thanks for the info

  • @LFTRnow
    @LFTRnow Год назад +3

    Interestingly, the birds actually DO get "zapped" (when only touching one wire), but the current is very low. Something called "corona discharge" comes off the wires and is leaked into the air along the length of the wire. It is concentrated when the object is pointy (like a bird's beak for example). The leakage is very low, but it rises with voltage. You may have noticed very few birds sitting on the very tall "extremely high voltage" (220kV and up) lines. The increased voltage increases corona discharge. The birds don't die, but it gets uncomfortable. It is similar to the experiment you see where someone touches a Van De Graff generator while insulated and seeing their hair go on end. The electricity is trying to (and slowly does) escape into the air, but they are unharmed.

    • @cactusman1771
      @cactusman1771 Год назад +1

      I like watching helicopter linemen work on those. Its fun watching the lineman use a metal stick to drain the corona discharge before working on the wire.

    • @adamg9518
      @adamg9518 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@cactusman1771It's not corona discharge it is charging current. They arn't draining anything they are getting up to the same potential as the conductor.

  • @roachtoasties
    @roachtoasties Год назад +1

    Good news for birds, but some of those wires the birds were standing on weren't electrical wires. You got phone and cable, insulated wires and even cables that are helping support the pole.

  • @Soul-co7ki
    @Soul-co7ki 3 года назад +48

    This question was in mind in years and thank you for making this clear to me.

  • @PhilosophyThatMatters
    @PhilosophyThatMatters 3 года назад +50

    This is one of my deepest teenage questions to which nobody I know gave a good answer. Thank you for finally putting my question to rest.

    • @monstrousdickzilla2744
      @monstrousdickzilla2744 Год назад

      Now you can rest peacefully

    • @zaid.ann177
      @zaid.ann177 Год назад

      Why did electrons didn't went through bird?
      Cuz electrons don't want to take a U turn to come in same path or what😂?

    • @valandhol9four680
      @valandhol9four680 Год назад +1

      Except it's not true the electrons move along the power line to your home. It's better understood as a ripple along a jumping rope.

    • @cactusman1771
      @cactusman1771 Год назад +1

      @@valandhol9four680 or a pulse in a stretched slinky.

  • @FriendlyKat
    @FriendlyKat 2 года назад +1

    As a kid, I was told it was because the electricity flowed on the bottom of the wire. 🤣LOL
    Cool video!

  • @cayotelives
    @cayotelives 2 года назад

    Electrical wire mastery 101 . Passed. Now Let's try that fancy cape

  • @toxicity6629
    @toxicity6629 3 года назад +16

    2:30 my mans really almost got hit with force lightning and just looks calm asf lmao

    • @redrosie7498
      @redrosie7498 3 года назад

      Don't worry he also has the force to push it back

  • @DarkOceanShark
    @DarkOceanShark 3 года назад +7

    2:02 my man got some really cool moves 😂

  • @cesarloya4525
    @cesarloya4525 Год назад

    The curiosity has been killing me for years now i know thank you you have earned a sub

  • @timothyjames1846
    @timothyjames1846 2 года назад

    I don't about electrical wires, but I live in Chicago. One morning I was waiting for an El train at a station. I saw a bird walking on the tracks. It came precariously close to the third rail. Unfortunately it eventually walked on it. Then zap. It never knew what hit it. Gone to pigeon heaven.

  • @Agnelum1
    @Agnelum1 3 года назад +140

    I remember asking my high school physics teacher the question if a person can hang from a power line and avoid electrocution as long as they remain off the ground. He said it's also dependent on the "potential difference". I don't remember the explanation as he gave it to me, but what my brain stored is basically that you can't just hover 1cm off the ground while holding onto a high voltage line and expect not to get fried. So it's not just a simple matter of "as long as I don't touch the ground I'll be fine".

    • @ziphyperap3369
      @ziphyperap3369 2 года назад +48

      Of course. Just because a material is an insulator doesn't mean electrons cant flow through it. Air itself isn't a conductor (luckily), but as you see, the worker at 2:30 is making the current flowing through air. Simply put, everything is a conductor when the voltage is high enough. Even things like glass or rubber. And thats why materials can also be "half conductors" and having a millimetre thick layer of rubber doesn't save you from getting shocked.

    • @tomtoms15
      @tomtoms15 2 года назад +4

      Without a doubt. There's way too many variables. For example, things that are in your person, type of cloth, rings, what's on the ground as well, a million things. There's no black and white type situation where if u don't do this, then x thing won't happn, etc etc

    • @HyperMario64
      @HyperMario64 Год назад +8

      Yeah it's not as clear cut. The rule of thumb is that 30kV per cm of air is necessary to have a current flow through it. But once the air gets ionized, the channel is open and it may expand further. Also in the real world, a bird is not at the same potential when it comes into contact with the live wire. It will take a bit of transient current for the charges in the bird body to equalize with the line. Good example is with linemen working on HV transmission lines from helicopters, they first connect to the line a rod connected to the helicopter body before working on it. At these high voltages the transient current is visible on camera as the rod approaches from the line. Same with AC (even with no load) on a power line, there is always some capacitance to the wire because a real-world wire, of course having a non-zero volume, necessarily stores some charge at any point. That's why we have reactors to correct that in substations (among other sources of reactance in the system). DC power may not seem to have that issue as the potential is constant, but in the real world no regulator is perfect and a AC component is always present. We have all these nice abstractions we can understand with these fancy elegant circuits diagrams, but there is always more to it...

    • @SC-zq6cu
      @SC-zq6cu Год назад +3

      so if my feet are 2m above the ground i'm safe ?

    • @Johnnyy832
      @Johnnyy832 Год назад +1

      It’s as long as there isn’t a voltage difference. Electricity likes taking the path of least resistance.

  • @TheSlimmshadyy
    @TheSlimmshadyy 3 года назад +242

    Plot twist:
    You are a bird, watching this to understand why you don't get electrocuted while chilling on power lines with your homies.

  • @manaraslespaul
    @manaraslespaul Год назад +1

    Its a comon misconception that electric current is the movement of the electrons in a wire, while is actually the flow of energy through the electromagnetic fields.

  • @jnac8857
    @jnac8857 2 года назад

    Yaay, you just answered one of things that have bugged me everytime I see those birds sitting on the wires. Awesome!

  • @sbreheny
    @sbreheny 3 года назад +19

    The clip at 1:51 is a bit misleading. The very high voltage lines shown are actually dangerous for birds to land on and you won't see birds on them (they feel pain as they get close to the wire and avoid landing on it - usually - although sometimes they do get killed). The wires with birds on them in this clip are so-called "shield wires" and they are grounded. Their purpose is to help prevent direct lightning strikes to the power lines (the lightning will usually strike the grounded, higher shield wire instead). The reason why very high voltage (>100,000 V) lines are a problem for birds is that all objects, including birds, have a property called capacitance. The capacitance is bigger when the object is bigger. Since these (and almost all) lines are alternating current, connecting a capacitive load allows a small current flow (essentially electrons flow into and back out of the object on each cycle of the AC). The higher the voltage, the more current flow. A typical residential street high voltage line (about 10,000 V) isn't high enough voltage to affect the birds but large cross-country lines (typically 300,000 V) are a problem.

  • @Bandicoot803
    @Bandicoot803 3 года назад +94

    Allow me to correct a crucial mistake you made in your video about no current flowing through birds sitting on the single power line phase: Are you aware of the step voltage? When a current flows through a loop regardless of its length a certain differential loss is always present. That's why a bird on the power line represents a high-value resistor hooked up in parallel to the line it sits on unless it lifts one leg off and detaches the connection ( open circuit ). A barely noticeable amount of current also flows through its body, but no where nearly enough to be even noticed ( if at all ). Another dangerous situation takes place upon being near a thunderstorm when a lightning bolt strikes the earth at this point of time. The current flowing through the ground spreads 360° outwards. The further more out it flows, the more the voltage drops. That drop in voltage in relation to the distance from the starting point is a dangerous matter. A person walking nearby suddenly feels that voltage difference shooting through his/her legs, causing it to instantly feel uncomfortable and eventually collapsing. That's why it is important to keep both feet tight together in order to keep that crucial voltage difference as low as possible. Wether the voltage difference varies depends upon the earth conductivity in dry or wet condition. Also the amount of minerals and salt in the soil are a contrubiting factor in regards of the dirt chemistry.

    • @halil7588
      @halil7588 2 года назад +17

      Perfect knowledge, when i apply job interview they asked me why birds don't get electricity on their body, I exactly explain that in your way. They little bit shocked but they liked my answer. I got magnetic field course. Thanks to this course :)

    • @googleevil9553
      @googleevil9553 2 года назад +3

      Yes! yes! I knew that was the case, but no one mentions it. Very good day to you sir!

    • @MCAlexisYT
      @MCAlexisYT Год назад

      What does “dirt chemistry” mean?

    • @SteveIsHavingMC
      @SteveIsHavingMC Год назад +4

      @@MCAlexisYT what chemicals are in the dirt.

    • @Bandicoot803
      @Bandicoot803 Год назад +3

      @@MCAlexisYT Defines what elements the individual earth layers are composed of.

  • @Aaliyah_Matyevna
    @Aaliyah_Matyevna 2 года назад

    The only easy video I found in youtube and google. Thanks for the video. I understood nothing from books.

  • @Not-Aussie-boy-Parker
    @Not-Aussie-boy-Parker 2 года назад

    Cockatoo’s hang upside down on them. Funny ass birds

  • @tescobakery1927
    @tescobakery1927 3 года назад +3

    1:49 *Chuckles* I'm in danger

  • @mrunalbisan3647
    @mrunalbisan3647 3 года назад +5

    I asked this question to the science teacher in my 9th standard 2011....after 10 years I am getting satisfactory answer. Thanks to youtube🙏

  • @zzzarkka
    @zzzarkka Год назад

    This made me appreciate the line men who have been working day and night to restore electricity to fort Myers beach and Sanibel. Y’all are literally badass and I hope y’all got paid a shit load.

  • @gustavomedrano3628
    @gustavomedrano3628 Год назад

    as a kid in el salvador i remember birds sleeping in the electric wires (usulutan alameda) i remember seeing a few dead on the pavement

  • @andthentheyallfook8582
    @andthentheyallfook8582 3 года назад +73

    2:04 When your crush passes by

  • @sophiaisabelle01
    @sophiaisabelle01 3 года назад +40

    I’ve always wondered about that. But even if they do end up getting electrocuted for some reason, there’d be numerous bird corpses lying around anywhere, and that’d also be a complete hassle to clean all of that up.

    • @studentofsmith
      @studentofsmith Год назад +1

      Or the scavengers will have a free meal - cooked too.

  • @cheesebusiness
    @cheesebusiness Год назад

    The wires are isolated, that’s why the birds don’t get shocked.
    Besides that, so many simplifications… Electrons travel very slowly, about 1cm/s. Also in alternating current lines they wobble around a single place. What travels fast and transfers energy is the electromagnetic field.
    Alternating electromagnetic field doesn’t always require a wire to travel. That’s why you can get electrocuted despite the wire isolation.

  • @billlonee9470
    @billlonee9470 Год назад

    I saw a bird fly into the wrong part of the setup, just the other night. Kaboom! Sparks everywhere.

  • @junzenlavapie4458
    @junzenlavapie4458 3 года назад +20

    I'm using a headset right now, and that unexpected sound effect at 1:32 shocked me into battle stance.

  • @nxthgbutgemz
    @nxthgbutgemz 3 года назад +10

    Lol that bird got too comfortable smh 1:32 I hope it’s in a better place 🙏

    • @ineedmorecarrots6063
      @ineedmorecarrots6063 3 года назад +1

      Its alive i saw the whole video its just it lose its consciousness for a moment

    • @nxthgbutgemz
      @nxthgbutgemz 3 года назад

      @@ineedmorecarrots6063 death wasn’t it’s destiny

  • @oriraykai3610
    @oriraykai3610 Год назад

    Ground or return circuit has to come within several feet of the power line to complete the circuit on a dry day. Heavy humidity can increase that distance due to conductive impurities suspended in the air. This applies to anything in contact with the wire, like a bird sitting on it too.

  • @khethadlamini4086
    @khethadlamini4086 2 года назад

    Solution: let’s teach birds electrical engineering so they can repair the wires for us.

  • @epikgamur9621
    @epikgamur9621 3 года назад +23

    1:34 I shouldn't be laughing at that 😂

  • @wendihyd6799
    @wendihyd6799 3 года назад +6

    I had no idea those wires were live. I figured it was like the cords in our homes that could be touched, like when you remove a plug from the wall...

    • @markushutto4017
      @markushutto4017 3 года назад

      Me too

    • @marywealth6475
      @marywealth6475 3 года назад

      Me, as well. I'm 'shocked' to learn otherwise. You'd think that all the moisture from rain, snow, etc. would short out the wires causing huge blackouts every time there was precipitation. Still, I've seen those wires close up, and they certainly look like they're insulated with rubber.

    • @markushutto4017
      @markushutto4017 3 года назад

      @@marywealth6475 yea me too

  • @raddastronaut
    @raddastronaut Год назад +1

    Well the line in the thumbnail is a bracing line not a power line. Power lines are insulated. They only die if their feet get under the shielding.

  • @ejshelby5460
    @ejshelby5460 6 месяцев назад +1

    The actual and much simpler explanation is the wires are wrapped and insulated

  • @konrad8541
    @konrad8541 3 года назад +62

    So, if I end up hanging on a power line, I'll be fine as long as I don't touch the ground while I'm doing that. Got it.

  • @user-cd4bx6uq1y
    @user-cd4bx6uq1y 3 года назад +11

    The silent kid when teacher explains nothing:

  • @herewegoagain4041
    @herewegoagain4041 Год назад

    2:56 pause it there. Talking about electrifying job. The thrill of highwire act and highvoltage intensity. Getting a rush at work for real

  • @MikeBarbarossa
    @MikeBarbarossa 2 года назад

    I'm screaming "not grounded!" at the thumbnail in my recommends

  • @amardave84
    @amardave84 3 года назад +42

    Electrical line man, the most dangerous job.

    • @damion1121
      @damion1121 3 года назад +1

      The real crazy ones are the guys who do it out of a helicopter.

    • @BillC-64
      @BillC-64 3 года назад +13

      One job where no is claiming to want diversity.

    • @robertleamon1419
      @robertleamon1419 3 года назад +4

      @@BillC-64 there are multiple jobs where a particular group isn’t screaming for diversity. Oil rigs, mining, electricians, plumbing, hvac, road construction i can keep going.

  • @RayMak
    @RayMak 3 года назад +96

    Best explanation ever

    • @urdhvanaik8666
      @urdhvanaik8666 3 года назад +1

      Lmao hey usually your comments are filled with replies so I can't but this time I am lucky. Btw How are you?

    • @cypher1133
      @cypher1133 3 года назад

      why are you on top again with just 51 likes.

    • @Wariki
      @Wariki 3 года назад

      Another EZ report

    • @chad5137
      @chad5137 3 года назад

      Henlo ray

    • @huniverso
      @huniverso 3 года назад +1

      Can you explain? I kinda stupid for this tips of videos

  • @ppeev3003
    @ppeev3003 2 года назад +1

    Great video. Thank you!

  • @zoomed66
    @zoomed66 Год назад

    Birds have a natural rubber like compound on their feet that prevents any electrical discharge.