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originally posted by: andy06shake
a reply to: 727Sky
"Life, Liberty & Levin 5/27/..." This video is no longer available due to a copyright claim by Fox News Network, LLC."
Cant view video im afraid.
E1 would not only be significant due to the rise time, but the induced voltage as well. Under perfect conditions, it could produce enough voltage to rival small lightning bolts. Coupled with the suddenness of the surge, that's a double whammy for anything connected to the electric lines.
The prolonged DC voltage produced by E3 was something I did not consider. Yes, absolutely, a large enough E3 event would burn out the windings in transformers easily... assuming they survived the E1 surge.
originally posted by: Flyingclaydisk
a reply to: DexterRiley
Isn't this pretty much the same exact thing I said earlier? That E1 would knock out the instrumentation and control, not necessarily the power generation and distribution itself? And, that it was E3 which was the most detrimental due to its long interval?