Look at how methodical this gentleman is with every point of the work process. This is almost medicinal. Electrical high voltage installations deserve the utmost attention and highest standards. Long-term safety first.
Being a retired electrician, I can tell you that is a back breaking job out in the real world. That cable weights a lot and it man handles YOU. Vid is a good one for showing how it's done, and I wish it was just as easy in the real world. He did a great job on that cable.
I've seen it done standing in a trench while a sump pump was running to remove the water the guy was standing in... not exactly laboratory conditions...
Now I can splice my 11kV primary line for my new secret laboratory. I origionally ran my primary too short. This will solve my problem so I can resume taking over the world.
Just a heads up for ya on your 'world conquest'. It's going to take a LOT of effort to get past my 500kV energised faraday cage I've built as a 'panic room'. I guess you COULD just wait for the batteries to run down, but since Elon Musk grabbed all the Li-Ion cells, I chose to use a Thorium-based LFTR inside the cage instead. Given the half life of my Thorium stockpile, I think I should be god for about 13 or so billion years
+phuturephunk i have little to no experience in anything electrical. i'm kind of handy, do my own work on the car. For some reason i've been watching the shit out of these!
This is true, but it might be more of a sales pitch. There are lots of manufacturers of cable joints so they were probably demonstrating how there joints are done. Compared to say a raychem, sicame or tyco joint. Someone might see this and say that's quicker than the joints they use. Or it might be a training video for apprentices.
Oh god , this takes me back to watching AEP safety videos , those guys are always working in a perfectly dug out ditch with no mud or water , rubber blankets everywhere with plenty of wipes , 🤭😂🤣😂 that never happened for me at any point in my career. Still kept the power on for people tho 👍🏾 , people are always happy to see the power guy as long as he is there to turn you back On and not Off .
Try doing it without all those special tools, just a utility knife and a tape measure. We were replacing a five kv line at a veterans hospital that shorted out, we worked about 30 hours strait, half of it in the rain, I made up one end, another guy made up the other end in a vault underground, I guess he was too tired, we turned it on, and it blew the man hole cover about 50' in the air, so I had to do his splice all over, it held the next time we turned it on, that was a bitch.
I was a 52E in the Army and doing this was part of the duty description. This is slow, tedious work and made even worse, far worse in the field. Great video guys! 🤙
This is really nice work. Too bad no one spends the time to do this. My first boss fired me the first day. He said I did really great work, and that he never needed to worry if my connection would hold. He said he never needed to worry about the inspector finding something wrong with my work But he told me he would be out of business if he kept people like me. I took way to long, because I did all the steps and did it right. He had guys that just used butt connectors from home Depot and some 99 cent electric tape True story
What was the application? There is a engineering quote that says, sometimes good enough is best. Granted, I believe those decisions should be left up to the engineer
If your boss was a high-voltage lines contractor and fired you for the reasons you mention, he should have his license revoked. I imagine his luck was holding up around the time he fired you and had not killed anyone yet from negligence.
@@frankieromnimon5898 at the time I was fired he had not had any fires yet A few years later he had his first, then his second. I moved out of the area and don't know if any more happened I know several buyers had issues with outlets and switches and lights not working and had repairs done.
+Voima More importantly, did you use cable elevators to elevate the cables off the ground as not to cause interference and static buildup? Did you break in your wires for 96 hours? Are you using oxygen free copper? lol
Obviously this will be a lot different when you're doing it on the field. you will want to make sure you have all the correct heat shrinks on before you make the first Connection.
Procedures are for newbs when you've been doing this stuff for years. Personally I would like a second person with me doing this double checking every step as we go.
While working for a utility company years ago, I had such a job. I had to do this in a deep dug out hole in the ground and it is cold and some what dark and the cable always fights you
One time i got an almost brand new 50 foot extension cord someone put out for garbage. It had been cut (with a lawnmore I'd guesss) and repaired. The guy stripped the insularion, and wound the wires together really tight but left them all bare and just wrapped it with scotch tape, then duct tape. he DIDN'T insulate them from each other!. He obviously didn't watch this video, like we all did! :) LOL
На стенде конечно хорошо, а посадить этого спеца в канаву, где по щиколотку воды со снегом, сверху дождик. Если наращивал, один вопрос, а если ремонт обрыва - где маркировка фаз?
this job is highly skilled its my job at Bechtel Intl. terminator and splicer of medium voltage XLPE and EPT up to 33kv and also tapping of rubberized tape 33kv 17 kv 11kv 5 kv in omam and Africa.
Excelente trabajo me encantó me hace acordar hacé años atrás que también hise esos empalme de medía tención en los pórticos del puerto de exolgan en Buenos Aires lleva tiempo paciencia y muchas concentración y atención a lo que se está haciendo ya que es un trabajo de precisión y muy peligroso por las cargas que manejan eso cables y sobre todo con la humedad felicitaciones colega
Why is the copper screening braid double-layered over half the joint, then open-wound over the remainder? Did they run out of braid half way through the job?
nlo114 Hi, no nothing ran out. The mesh is to pick up surface current and as long as its in contact with the insulation/conductive tubes, the semi-con layer on the cores and back to earth, that is all that is needed. Has been tested too so we know its fine.
Open flame torches are most commonly used actually and standard practice in the trade. Much quicker and far easier, but yes U could use a heat gun if U really wanted too
+Toby Sinclair-Bell Good call on the yellow flame, the red mastic should not protrude beyond the first shrinks, it needs a wad of red mastic between the three conductors at each end and the gray silicone tape is not for a pressure seal between layers it's for gap filling, so the last lap seal needs to be the red mastic, and how did he run out of the aluminum gauze and not finish the half lap covering? Oops
It's already over engineered by the insurance company... Because writing up new SOP's out of blood, tends to cause more issues than doing it right the first time.
Its pretty amazing because ANY excess resistance at such high voltages becomes basically a toaster and will fry the cable. Also, circulating currents due to fields can become and issue and create heat. It could become expensive too because a bad joint could waste a lot of energy. These cables are designed more like video Coax cables when you take impedance into effect. You wouldn't just join two RG-6 cables by twisting the conductors together. A bad video cable splice may throw a microvolt signal out of phase and give a bad picture but at these voltages a bad connection could induce eddy/circulation currents and create havoc.
Exactly, pretty much completely backwards. High current results in heat, high voltage results in a strong E-field and corona discharge around sharp uninsulated connections. Eddy currents stirred up by magnetic fields are not normally an issue with cables like these, and electric fields don't stir up LARGE currents unless there is a massive gradient and high frequencies (capacitive coupling in high frequency high voltage circuits, like in a modern X-ray machine with 50kV transformer switched at 25+ kHz). The characteristic impedance of 3-phase power cables (both shielded and not) is waaay less important than coax carrying signals (fault current capabilities and mechanical properties of the insulation often see more attention). Bad connections in coax or power cable don't result in eddy currents (magnetic/inductive coupling), they result in a poorly grounded shield that can act as an antenna, picking up RF noise and capacitively coupled signals.
+Toby Sinclair-Bell Good call on the yellow flame, the red mastic should not protrude beyond the first shrinks, it needs a wad of red mastic between the three conductors at each end and the gray silicone tape is not for a pressure seal between layers it's for gap filling, so the last lap seal needs to be the red mastic, and how did he run out of the aluminum gauze and not finish the half lap covering? Oops
+Virtualgod2009 i understand, im a sparky and looking to get into bigger stuff in the future, distribution... Pays better and honestly i think its much more interesting than 230/400v i currently work with
Look at how methodical this gentleman is with every point of the work process. This is almost medicinal.
Electrical high voltage installations deserve the utmost attention and highest standards. Long-term safety first.
Being a retired electrician, I can tell you that is a back breaking job out in the real world. That cable weights a lot and it man handles YOU. Vid is a good one for showing how it's done, and I wish it was just as easy in the real world. He did a great job on that cable.
yeah this video is a best case scenario, inside, cable nicely elevated from the ground and supported....
Definitely not that easy in a manhole/vault, and that's me doing single conductor 1mil mcm
When I did 3 phase splices, I always staggered my butt joints
I've seen it done standing in a trench while a sump pump was running to remove the water the guy was standing in... not exactly laboratory conditions...
@@davep6977 this is a high voltage joint,you cannot place connections where u would want..there are strict measurements the jointer must follow
Now I can splice my 11kV primary line for my new secret laboratory. I origionally ran my primary too short. This will solve my problem so I can resume taking over the world.
Just watch out for annoying sisters and/or midget rivals.
dexters laboratory lol
@Eìon O'hInneirghe ha ha ha ha ha haa
Learn how to spell "originally" first, then think about taking over, please.
Just a heads up for ya on your 'world conquest'.
It's going to take a LOT of effort to get past my 500kV energised faraday cage I've built as a 'panic room'.
I guess you COULD just wait for the batteries to run down, but since Elon Musk grabbed all the Li-Ion cells, I chose to use a Thorium-based LFTR inside the cage instead.
Given the half life of my Thorium stockpile, I think I should be god for about 13 or so billion years
I don't know what it is, but these industrial cabling demonstrations are friggen fascinating to no end.
+phuturephunk i have little to no experience in anything electrical. i'm kind of handy, do my own work on the car. For some reason i've been watching the shit out of these!
Yes they are I'm an electrician and this are very critical connections you have to be trained how to do them
phuturephunk ok good I'm glad I'm not the only one that fell down this rabbit hole.
phuturephunk
Live LV jointing is more fun especially on old lead cables
To all electrician in this world, you have done great job to keep this world running.
since no one said it yet, on behalf of every proud electrician: thanks!
Can't believe I watched that whole video.. and enjoyed it. How did I end up here anyway?
This is true, but it might be more of a sales pitch. There are lots of manufacturers of cable joints so they were probably demonstrating how there joints are done. Compared to say a raychem, sicame or tyco joint. Someone might see this and say that's quicker than the joints they use. Or it might be a training video for apprentices.
+John Bobrek they did get the bad guy and send him to jail :)
And can you believe, that this guy gets paid only in tips!
That's why the women become dancers.
It’s funny you said that John Borneo as I was thinking the same thing!! Haha! I’m in the electrical industry so naturally, I was mesmerized ✌️🤓
Same here
Today once again the UA-cam algorithm has reunited us here to watch this random video at 3am
I can relate to this
Damn right... 1:36am
I was watching tennis games.... Then this
Пор до р за ми для лендинга на о
😅😅😅
This is my dads company i too do not know how this has happened
With 4.6m views and 20K likes it's fair to say that nobody was looking for this but everybody needed.
How many layers of protection do we need?
Engineer: *YES*
Engineer2: More Layers!
11kV 3 Core XLPE & EPR High Voltage ⚡ If you do it above the ground than one layer of air is sufficient :)
@@gorillaau more!
What is need for safety this connection after not any problems
@@ArthursHD فبررر
Me: “I’m not going to watch the entire things.”
Also me: *watches entire thing*
And I thought I was a hero when I repaired the end of a garden hose this weekend...
😆😆😆
Some day, I'll be out drinking and the power will go out. That's when the skills I learned today will come in handy.
Oh god , this takes me back to watching AEP safety videos , those guys are always working in a perfectly dug out ditch with no mud or water , rubber blankets everywhere with plenty of wipes , 🤭😂🤣😂 that never happened for me at any point in my career. Still kept the power on for people tho 👍🏾 , people are always happy to see the power guy as long as he is there to turn you back On and not Off .
One of the coziest video in my collection. Often watching it before sleep
im just here soldering 12v dc connections
😄😄😄😄
😂😂😂😂
hope you are using heat shrink :P
@@Lewdacris916 or at least heat sleeves :D
Heavy Duty 12v DC connections xD
Love to see this done in a howling gale and lashing rain ! . Its a big boys version of what I would do on a mains cable
You wouldn't do it in those condition, you'd set up a tent or worst case wait for better weather.
@@mfx1 I'm sure that's what he meant... with a tent. But howling gale and lashing rain would still be happening and making the work difficult.
Love watching these types of videos. It is an art to be able to do this kind of work cleanly and precisely.
I so enjoy watching nonfiction videos.
I was a retired electrician too and experienced high voltage cable splicing ,it's very delicate and complicated steps to follow to perform this job .
That would be a pain in the ass if you connected the wires and forgot to slide the shrink wrap on first.
+99beta Exactly what I was thinking. That step should have been in the first part of the video.
+FREDDIE MAXWELL you mean the part at 0:11 ?
Not a big worry, there is zip heat shrink, that can fit on a cable without sliding.
What a world! :D
yavv kolev It may exist (good info!), but your boss probably wants you to follow the company workinstructions :-)
Bravo pour l'électricien qui a raccordé cet câble 👍
This is how engineers imagine it's done in the field
How does it actually work in the rain and mud?
@@MrKristyon pretty badly
Try doing it without all those special tools, just a utility knife and a tape measure.
We were replacing a five kv line at a veterans hospital that shorted out, we worked about 30 hours strait, half of it in the rain, I made up one end, another guy made up the other end in a vault underground, I guess he was too tired, we turned it on, and it blew the man hole cover about 50' in the air, so I had to do his splice all over, it held the next time we turned it on, that was a bitch.
@@MrKristyon Yes. In the field they build a tent first.
20mins per joint - this video proves it
How things have changed since I sat in a trench with a pot of solder and two ladles !
*pulls out massive soldering iron* I've got this guys!
15 watts is massive, right?
The bgm and the voice make this video look more intense it's like a doctor doing surgery😁
Btw I love it
So two really big wire nuts are out of the question, I'd imagine !
I won't even be doing something even close to this big ever so I dunno why I watched but it was fun! Best job I ever seen done !
me when I'm trying to glue my headphone wires back together.
lol
Informative. Useful. Calming. Inspiring. Life-changing. Enjoyable. Heart-warming. Other.
I dont have the slightest idea what any of this video is about. OR why I watched the entire thing completely mesmerized.
+Michael Stevens (LeFevre) its the music
+Michael Stevens Same, check out High voltage cable termination vids, its like porn i dont get it, but its So Good.
@@MrSheaonemillion is this a new trend, like watching ASMR?
@@DavidG2P if it is I wouldn't know, i have never known what's cool or trending.
I was a 52E in the Army and doing this was part of the duty description. This is slow, tedious work and made even worse, far worse in the field. Great video guys! 🤙
This is really nice work. Too bad no one spends the time to do this.
My first boss fired me the first day.
He said I did really great work, and that he never needed to worry if my connection would hold.
He said he never needed to worry about the inspector finding something wrong with my work
But he told me he would be out of business if he kept people like me.
I took way to long, because I did all the steps and did it right.
He had guys that just used butt connectors from home Depot and some 99 cent electric tape
True story
Sorry to hear this. It is true that people are greedy.
What was the application?
There is a engineering quote that says, sometimes good enough is best.
Granted, I believe those decisions should be left up to the engineer
@@michaelbarnhill2685 yes this aplikation .. Naturlich ha ha ha ha ha ha ha . ho ho ho ho ho ho.
If your boss was a high-voltage lines contractor and fired you for the reasons you mention, he should have his license revoked. I imagine his luck was holding up around the time he fired you and had not killed anyone yet from negligence.
@@frankieromnimon5898 at the time I was fired he had not had any fires yet
A few years later he had his first, then his second.
I moved out of the area and don't know if any more happened
I know several buyers had issues with outlets and switches and lights not working and had repairs done.
Work of art , to think guys are doing this in a hole in the ground in all weather, amazing 👏👏👏
I love these (pre- Internet) VHS videos demos.
I've got these as my speaker cables
+Voima
More importantly, did you use cable elevators to elevate the cables off the ground as not to cause interference and static buildup? Did you break in your wires for 96 hours? Are you using oxygen free copper? lol
@@pmgodfrey lol
Diese Montage in der Nacht bei strömenden Regen unterm Zelt, da fängt der Spass erst an......
I just realized, I watched this for 19 minutes..
Not something I'd want to be doing in a hole in Minnesota in January during a nice sleet storm. Gives me goose bumps just thinking about it.
I was waiting for him to pull out a huge heat gun lol. I use a lighter to melt my shrink wrap, his was a little larger.
Great Video Thorne Derrick! We are going to embed on an informational post for our 250 KCMIL through 6000 KCMIL High Voltage Cable. Good info!
Obviously this will be a lot different when you're doing it on the field.
you will want to make sure you have all the correct heat shrinks on before you make the first Connection.
This will come handy next time I repair a 11kV 3 Core XLPE & EPR High Voltage Cable.
Синей изолентой сверху забыл.
Very amazing tbh, did not think its so complicated. Alot of work going into this :)
Imagine completing a splice and realizing you forgot to slide the shrink wrap on beforehand.
if you are doing it without reading the procedure, then sure :p most people don't like to read procedures, so they usually fuck up.
Procedures are for newbs when you've been doing this stuff for years. Personally I would like a second person with me doing this double checking every step as we go.
Md Razi Shaikh
"Procedures are for newbs", he said, knowing nothing of science or epistemology.
Who, me?
I'm glad they included part 7756-WQ-4411 electrical cleaning tissues. My kit was missing them. Awaiting shipment from customer service.
Here hold my beer.... I can solder it together with my mighty Yihua.
While working for a utility company years ago, I had such a job.
I had to do this in a deep dug out hole in the ground and it is cold and some what dark and the cable always fights you
Here we are again by youtube recommendation.
Interesting to see heatshrink used. In London EDF (UK Power) Networks they encased everything in a potted resin.
What an amazingly intricate process. I never would have imagined. I wonder how much one of these splice kits costs.
1 new Toyota Camary.
a joining kit for 12kV cables with 3 phases costs about €400. For 24kV cable it's about €1000.
One time i got an almost brand new 50 foot extension cord someone put out for garbage. It had been cut (with a lawnmore I'd guesss) and repaired. The guy stripped the insularion, and wound the wires together really tight but left them all bare and just wrapped it with scotch tape, then duct tape. he DIDN'T insulate them from each other!.
He obviously didn't watch this video, like we all did! :) LOL
no one:
not a single soul:
yt algorithm during pandemic: wanna watch this guy join 2 wires?
I am also 220, 400kV jointer. Excellent work. Good teaching
Thanks for watching!
I've probably watched this 30 times at least, only because it puts me straight to sleep
ASMR ! (google it)
Excellent, I am glad we can help you sleep better
super amazing after 7 years!
На стенде конечно хорошо, а посадить этого спеца в канаву, где по щиколотку воды со снегом, сверху дождик. Если наращивал, один вопрос, а если ремонт обрыва - где маркировка фаз?
this job is highly skilled its my job at Bechtel Intl. terminator and splicer of medium voltage XLPE and EPT up to 33kv and also tapping of rubberized tape 33kv 17 kv 11kv 5 kv in omam and Africa.
watch out men, there are two snipers
@Eìon O'hInneirghe You must be really fun at parties bud.
@Eìon O'hInneirghe
Tosser.
Thanks algorithm, now I know something I'll 1000% never need to know.
I don't know man... Seems like a Lotta work
Love this video most I work with was 440VAC . Be safe out there .
I should to that to my speaker wires. That would make them cat-proof, I hope.
Excelente trabajo me encantó me hace acordar hacé años atrás que también hise esos empalme de medía tención en los pórticos del puerto de exolgan en Buenos Aires lleva tiempo paciencia y muchas concentración y atención a lo que se está haciendo ya que es un trabajo de precisión y muy peligroso por las cargas que manejan eso cables y sobre todo con la humedad felicitaciones colega
Nice work at starting video but in last I'm confused how can we put two round heat shrink tube in already jointed wires 🤣🤣🤣
He put them on at the very beginning
@@michaelstewart9308 check his video at beginning
@@michaelstewart9308 check at 17:43 he slide tube from sides because it open from sides if it is in field it would be a great mistake
i used to do this with cotton tape and linsead oil and lead plumbing joints 30 years ago
Why is the copper screening braid double-layered over half the joint, then open-wound over the remainder? Did they run out of braid half way through the job?
nlo114 Hi, no nothing ran out. The mesh is to pick up surface current and as long as its in contact with the insulation/conductive tubes, the semi-con layer on the cores and back to earth, that is all that is needed. Has been tested too so we know its fine.
If is done that way for conduct the transceiver calibration support to its optimum performance.
Wow! These guys must get paid big bucks! That's some complicated work!
WAGO do something, please! ;)
LOL
2 red pixels died at the left of the video...
Technology is not ever perfect 😃!
Very interesting video for passionates of electrical sciences 💡⚡🔌!
"All traces of carbon must be removed from the insulation"
*Blasts yellow flamed burner at the insulation, filling it with soot*
Why doesn't he use a heat gun?
@@smith549371 Maybe there is a power failure.
@@mk23909 you can use gas heat guns also, theres no need for flame. Most people would consider a flame unprofessional or amateur.
@@smith549371😉
Open flame torches are most commonly used actually and standard practice in the trade. Much quicker and far easier, but yes U could use a heat gun if U really wanted too
As an electronics technician I learned what I thought was some insane ways of splicing wires. This however is on a different scale
9:44 "...all carbon traces must be removed from the primary insulation" but once he is done of that he marks it with a yellow grease marker.
+David Hughes And shrinks it with a yellow flame that is probably putting soot (Carbon) all over the place...
+Toby Sinclair-Bell Good call on the yellow flame, the red mastic should not protrude beyond the first shrinks, it needs a wad of red mastic between the three conductors at each end and the gray silicone tape is not for a pressure seal between layers it's for gap filling, so the last lap seal needs to be the red mastic, and how did he run out of the aluminum gauze and not finish the half lap covering? Oops
It's already over engineered by the insurance company... Because writing up new SOP's out of blood, tends to cause more issues than doing it right the first time.
Hasta hacer todo ese trabajo , ya se me quita las ganas de jugar al PLAY STATION 😂😁😂😁😂😁
Excellent video!
mire la miniatura y entre y no pude dejar de mirarlo jajajajajajaja y si es un byuen video
Must admit that was great to watch
Beeping noise in the background as if this man is performing surgery on a human. Good job Sir!
16:15 I don't get it, why wrapping the tape half way round tightly and the rest not? Doesn't make any sense to me.
GOOD VIDEO....LEARNT ALOT
ENGIYAH VIDEOS
I wished I would have went to the Johnny Horizon school for doing some gnarly shrink wrap jobs. Awesome job!!
That's perfect for speaker cable. Lol
Used to do cablejointing in the old lead and pitch days
This is exactly what I did when I tapped into a WestPenn power line to build my underground meth lab.
Unlimited power at my finger tips
We have to carry out PD tests when working in substations with these joints, several have failed when installed vertically
I know, they fail on a regular basis
the orientation should not have any adverse affect. something is contaminating the union.
its all very well in a lab, but as I know, its very different outside in a trench.
Bonjour super travail de précision
did someone leave a tap running in the background
OK, this looks easy. No problem. I am now ready to splice high voltage cable.
damn I think i dont even want to know how much 1 meter of this cable costs :P
depends on the cable, but the cables I have worked on are similar, though different and they are $150/meter
Vanklow wow thats not as much as I expected however you need a lot of cable for this task :P
@@Karanar
.
..??
One electrifying performance.
Next on How It's Made...
You mom and dad's vibrator, power supply cable.
Ok sekali buat kami contoh.semangat sukses selalu
как всегда: хуяк, и забыл одеть последнюю термоусадку :D
классика))
👍👍👍😅😅😅
Its pretty amazing because ANY excess resistance at such high voltages becomes basically a toaster and will fry the cable. Also, circulating currents due to fields can become and issue and create heat. It could become expensive too because a bad joint could waste a lot of energy. These cables are designed more like video Coax cables when you take impedance into effect. You wouldn't just join two RG-6 cables by twisting the conductors together. A bad video cable splice may throw a microvolt signal out of phase and give a bad picture but at these voltages a bad connection could induce eddy/circulation currents and create havoc.
Exactly, pretty much completely backwards. High current results in heat, high voltage results in a strong E-field and corona discharge around sharp uninsulated connections. Eddy currents stirred up by magnetic fields are not normally an issue with cables like these, and electric fields don't stir up LARGE currents unless there is a massive gradient and high frequencies (capacitive coupling in high frequency high voltage circuits, like in a modern X-ray machine with 50kV transformer switched at 25+ kHz). The characteristic impedance of 3-phase power cables (both shielded and not) is waaay less important than coax carrying signals (fault current capabilities and mechanical properties of the insulation often see more attention). Bad connections in coax or power cable don't result in eddy currents (magnetic/inductive coupling), they result in a poorly grounded shield that can act as an antenna, picking up RF noise and capacitively coupled signals.
alb12345672
Next up Electro booms does a 11kv splice lol
+Toby Sinclair-Bell Good call on the yellow flame, the red mastic should not protrude beyond the first shrinks, it needs a wad of red mastic between the three conductors at each end and the gray silicone tape is not for a pressure seal between layers it's for gap filling, so the last lap seal needs to be the red mastic, and how did he run out of the aluminum gauze and not finish the half lap covering? Oops
if anyone could do this live i will give them £1,000,000
Woods Gaming Channel Not worth it to risk your own life for that amount of money...
Woods Gaming Channel live as in the cables are live?
yes at 11kv potential... to be honest, they probably to do it
+Spikey Husky i think a lot is done live if you can be charged to same potential and isolate yourself from ground
+Virtualgod2009 i understand, im a sparky and looking to get into bigger stuff in the future, distribution... Pays better and honestly i think its much more interesting than 230/400v i currently work with
This guy must be a wizard
Thats the most annoying music I have ever heard.
Look at that work man looks flawless