← Back to context Comment by lolc 2 years ago Oh but the scenario where the drone does it without permission is just way more entertaining. 9 comments lolc Reply dkjaudyeqooe 2 years ago Three-quarters of a megavolt of electricity plus drones does seem like a lively mix. rtkwe 2 years ago There's no current though, the same way birds can sit safely on lines all day long. dclowd9901 2 years ago There is definitely current or there would be no wattage. 2 replies → baq 2 years ago Where is there no current? The video says 300A if I heard correctly 1 reply → jefftk 2 years ago It's hard to induce a current in a bird. BikiniPrince 2 years ago Imagine a future in which the power company manages drones that destroy the electronic barnacles on their lines.
dkjaudyeqooe 2 years ago Three-quarters of a megavolt of electricity plus drones does seem like a lively mix. rtkwe 2 years ago There's no current though, the same way birds can sit safely on lines all day long. dclowd9901 2 years ago There is definitely current or there would be no wattage. 2 replies → baq 2 years ago Where is there no current? The video says 300A if I heard correctly 1 reply → jefftk 2 years ago It's hard to induce a current in a bird.
rtkwe 2 years ago There's no current though, the same way birds can sit safely on lines all day long. dclowd9901 2 years ago There is definitely current or there would be no wattage. 2 replies → baq 2 years ago Where is there no current? The video says 300A if I heard correctly 1 reply → jefftk 2 years ago It's hard to induce a current in a bird.
BikiniPrince 2 years ago Imagine a future in which the power company manages drones that destroy the electronic barnacles on their lines.
Three-quarters of a megavolt of electricity plus drones does seem like a lively mix.
There's no current though, the same way birds can sit safely on lines all day long.
There is definitely current or there would be no wattage.
2 replies →
Where is there no current? The video says 300A if I heard correctly
1 reply →
It's hard to induce a current in a bird.
Imagine a future in which the power company manages drones that destroy the electronic barnacles on their lines.