This is the first article I wrote mostly about safety and not wearing gold or silver or anything metal so you don't die or have a finger burnt off while doing electrical work in your home or apartment
Understanding 110 AC and 220 Single phase: So far ...
Today I will write more about my experiences doing electrical work with my Electrical Contractor father from about age 10 to 17 and then for about a year when I was 21 and in between majors in college. I had before I was 21 gone to college to study computer data processing at Glendale College from 1966 to 1968 which is a community college in the town where I mostly grew up from 1956 to 1969 when I was 21 and left and lived other places after that. (mostly in California but also in Hawaii). So, by the time I was 20 I was proficient at programming (mostly IBM computers then) with COBOL and FORTRAN. Cobol is a business language and Fortran is better for Scientific Calculations like sending Rockets into space and stuff like this. Both Languages were so good and so fast that they are still used today by the way among people who want really fast results to their programs. I also learned to do keypunch which how you entered your programs into the computer in this era 1966 onward. The first home computer I ever owned was a TRS-80 from Radio Shack I bought for 800 dollars in 1978 and had only 4k memory and when you shut it off you had to save your programs in the Basic Language on a Tape Cassette then. Since my son was 4 years old I began teaching him to program his own video games in the Basic language. He still likes building his own home computers (desktops) today. He says building laptops is just too much trouble without a computer factory to actually build from scratch.
Though I never attempted to build a computer like my son sort of like his personal Ferrari computer for gaming and the like I always liked learning computer languages and so now I have learned Fortran, Cobol, Basic and HTML languages. Sometimes I still use HTML for creating my Links pages. In fact, I'm also likely going to work on my next links page some today which gives you the most read articles at this site in the last 7 days or so.
Begin electrical stuff:
First number 12 wires are usually for general purpose things in your home like plug outlets that you plug your toasters and all other appliances into.
Number 14 wires are usually for switch legs regarding primarily or secondary switches. For example, in my house I have switches that are two or more places where you can turn lights on or off from 2 or more places depending upon what direction you are coming into a room so you don't fall down trying to get to a light switch before you get the light on.
Power coming into the house or apartment:
First of all, most electrical transmission lines are 1000 volts or above either on a telephone pole or underground depending upon your area. You should NEVER NEVER NEVER touch a live 1000 foot volt line or else you are going to die if you touch the metal. So, in a storm when trees knock these things down stay away from them so you don't die. I only know one person who survived being hit with a 1000 volt bare line and he was about 15 or 17 then and when he touched it it made his body jump about 25 feet and knocked him unconscious. So, he is the single ONLY person I ever met who survived a jolt from a 1000 volt bare line.
Though you might see with the really big long distance line like across states or counties. You need really high AC voltages to prevent extreme line drops in voltage. You cannot successfully transmit DC power across distances which is why when Nicola Tesla invented AC power and fluorescent light bulbs and Tesla Coils it was such a breakthrough for all humanity.
Here is what the high tension lines transmit at across counties and states from Google AI:
AC electricity is transmitted over long distances at voltages ranging from 155,000 to 765,000 volts. These high voltages are used to minimize energy loss during transmission. The voltage is typically stepped up at the power station to these high levels and then stepped down at the destination for use.
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