@@DrLockShop The International Electrotechnical Commission and its national counterparts (IET, IEEE, VDE, etc.) define high voltage as above 1000 V for alternating current, and at least 1500 V for direct current. Why are you misleading consumers?
@@TradieTrev dude's a locksmith on a locksmith job, not an electrician on an electrician's job, not hard to see, why are you even getting so upset about that? when he said "danger high voltage" any moron can see he's reading the yellow label on the box, why couldn't you? he even specifically said "240 volts" so where is he being misleading? by comparison, the electrical industry knows nothing about locks which is why both of those "good enough" plastic utility locks can be opened with anything including a ham sandwich, meaning it can be left open and anyone can get a zap as a result, that's not something to respect
That's actually LV mate. You should of isolated that panel before drilling into it IMHO. I know my QLD Electrical Safety Act 2002 states it.
Yes your right
@@DrLockShop The International Electrotechnical Commission and its national counterparts (IET, IEEE, VDE, etc.) define high voltage as above 1000 V for alternating current, and at least 1500 V for direct current.
Why are you misleading consumers?
@@TradieTrev dude's a locksmith on a locksmith job, not an electrician on an electrician's job, not hard to see, why are you even getting so upset about that? when he said "danger high voltage" any moron can see he's reading the yellow label on the box, why couldn't you? he even specifically said "240 volts" so where is he being misleading? by comparison, the electrical industry knows nothing about locks which is why both of those "good enough" plastic utility locks can be opened with anything including a ham sandwich, meaning it can be left open and anyone can get a zap as a result, that's not something to respect
@@Nitrxgen Maybe because of electrocution?