
Many times in my 38 years at the mill I have wired 120 volts hot, but than agan I was an electrican. Against company rules, but as Smitty said, "you can't work in the dark" I have worked with millavolts up to 27,000 volts which would require a full flame suit, gloves, flash shoes, full tinted helmet, and a 10 foot wooden pike pole to pull fuses. I have found that 120 volts is the deadlyest voltage to work with if your not 100% knowledgeable about electricity. A LITTLE knowledge could get you killed. The reason being, that if you become part of a live circuit containing 120 volts you may not be able to let go of it. If the voltage passes through your heart, it will cause it to go into fibrilation or go into an abnormal beat. Blood does not pump properly throughout the body causing damage or death. Any voltage above 120 volts will usualy blow you off, but may cause severe damage and burns in the path it takes across your body. If it doesn't cross your heart, you will probably live, maybe with a few parts missing. Let me add one thing to this thread however, it's not the voltage that kills you, it's the amperage. Less that 1/2 Amp across your heart can kill you, and it's not always the black wire. Could be the red, blue, white, or even the green. In industral locations they are allowed to use more than one circuit with the same neutral (white) wire. One time, while changing a light fixture, I had to shut off 4 circuits in order to take the power off of the white wire to ground. It's the unexpected or something out of the norm that will get you. Personaly I would never give someone advice on how to wire or correct something unless I could first look at it and check it out with a meter. If I have gone that far, I might as well finish the job myself. Sorry for the lengthly tread, but I have seen the results of to many surprizes!!!! Bottom line, test and retest everything you work on !!! The life you save may be your own. Jim S
P.S. The most painful and lasting shock you can get is from DC voltage. AC current goes in both directions, DC only goes in one so it never goes down to zero volts in the middle of a cycle. That may hurt for weeks!!! Jim S