I've been puzzling over this excellent answer to the perennial "Why don't I get shocked by a hot wire if I'm not grounded?" question. The orders of magnitude just don't seem right for two reasons:
- The answer claims that the surface area of the "capacitive body" is the relevant metric. If the body is full of conductive mass is it not the volume that applies?
- Household electric service is often grounded by a "ground rod" – literally a long conductor driven into the earth. The earth it contacts is not necessarily a good conductor, so I don't understand how a ground rod can dissipate many orders of magnitude more current than can, say, a person of the same height and conductive volume.
So let's look at the simple case of an adult grabbing the hot wire of a 120V, 60Hz AC household electric supply: I just measured the resistance of my skin and found it to be in the hundreds of kΩ. Let's call it 120 kΩ to make the math easy: if the RMS voltage is 120V then I can conduct 1mA of current – assuming that I have ground potential.
I touch the ground, and sure enough, no charge is transferred. I have the same electric potential as the ground. So I grab that hot wire and the question is: When do I start looking to the electric supply like I'm not the ground?
Because once that supply gets through my insulating skin I'm electrically equivalent to a 20-gallon vat of highly-conductive saline. I start at ground potential, and my body will take current until it matches the potential of the power supply. But this is AC power, so I only "charge" for 1/120s before the polarity changes and I'm giving up electrons where before I was receiving them.
At 1mA, does 20 gallons of saline acquire a significant charge in 1/120s? If not, then it shouldn't matter whether some part of my body is touching a ground or not: the shock should be the same, because my body is "as good as ground" until it is brought significantly closer to the same potential as the power supply.
Furthermore, to question #1 above, assuming that saline is in an insulated container, does it matter what shape the container is? I just can't see how that could make a difference as far as the current is concerned.