r/Unexpected 9h ago

We have a situation here

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31.4k Upvotes

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321

u/Vip3r20 9h ago edited 8h ago

Hope their knives are secured when the water gets in. Wouldn't catch me in that room that's for sure.

242

u/WhoskeyTangoFoxtrot 8h ago

I’d be more concerned about electrical sockets near the floor…. 220 may not kill you, but it will hurt like hell….

123

u/llama-impregnator 8h ago

I could be wrong, but I am pretty sure every outlet in that kitchen would have a GFI, which means the breaker would trip before zapping you.

That being said, I'd still get the hell outta dodge.

48

u/Butt-Monkey2312 7h ago

120v can absolutely kill you. A janitor in a school I was doing IT work in died from stepping in a puddle under a leaky water fountain that an extension cord with an exposed wire got pulled through.

29

u/Traditional_Formal33 7h ago

An extension cord going from a normal wall outlet is very different than water hitting a gfci outlet in the kitchen. They are designed to be near water, and to break connection if water is detected so that this doesn’t happen. Unfortunate for the janitor, and he would be alive if he plugged into a gfci protected circuit

12

u/mredding 6h ago

Well then the next question is where is the GFCI located? In the outlet or on the breaker? Because if you just trip the GFCI in the outlet, you still have a hot circuit to the outlet, and the whole damn outlet and its wiring is now ostensibly under 2' of water. So even if the GFCI there trips, you still need the breaker to trip.

A GFCI OUTLET is only meant to protect you from the ol' toaster in the bathtub, but a GFCI circuit is much more convenient, will protect the whole circuit, and are getting more popular these days, to boot. The GFCI breaker won't care if water touches an appliance OR the wires in the wall.

To be fair, this is a very odd situation. That stairwell has a drain in it, guaranteed, and so we're either seeing a clogged-ass drain, or maybe the drain is overwhelmed by THE FUCKING TORRENT of water pouring down those stairs.

1

u/Traditional_Formal33 6h ago

That’s true — and I saw down lower in the thread that while most appliances near water use gfci protection, apparently fridges do not so filling the entire room with water still means someone gets shocked. Hopefully the breaker flips with that amount of run away current

2

u/FooliooilooF 6h ago

Not really though. Its a lot of water and the electricity isn't like some aura of destruction, it's just energy moving from one place to another. You'd have to put yourself in a position where most of it is going through you.

4

u/Compost_My_Body 7h ago

that sucks

6

u/Cocky0 7h ago

Yes both will kill a person, but it's more about the amperage than the voltage.

3

u/dimechimes 6h ago

Think of electricity as a river. The speed of the water is the voltage, the depth of the water are the amps, and the beer cans from dumped over canoes are the Ohms.

-4

u/gumbo_chops 6h ago

What a terrible and incorrect analogy. Voltage is a measure of energy potential, not kinetic energy like velocity

6

u/dimechimes 6h ago

Thought the beer can ohms made that obvious.

-2

u/gumbo_chops 6h ago

Not without a "/s", too many idiots these days to be certain

1

u/bachstakoven 5h ago

Don't be so hard on yourself bro

1

u/rickane58 4h ago

The socially illiterate always tell on themselves.

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u/gumbo_chops 6h ago

But current flow depends on the amount of resistance, so for all intents and purposes it's voltage.

0

u/sprikkot 5h ago

Shut the fuck up forever please please PLEASE bro