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220V is safer

Why i said that

1) the change of a fire due to overload is much lower. (its more difficult to overload a 220V circuit)

2) The shock itself is dangerous (or twice dangerous), but safety devices, like circuit breakers, DR, etc have a minimal (but existent) change to go off faster than 110V, exactly because of the higher voltage. So ok, the shock itself is worse, but it may last a fraction of second less. and it can be the difference between life and death.

3) psichology factors... people naturally tend to be more cautious when they know it's 220V. so not because the voltage itself is safer, but because people have a better attitude and behavior when using 220V appliances.
 
A circuit breaker is *not* a shock protection device. Never, ever assume that.

All a circuit breaker (MCB in Europe) does is trip when too much current is flowing (an overcurrent). This protects against fire, not shock. They do exactly the same job as a fuse. These will allow large current to flow (enough to power several appliances) but not more than the fixed wiring in the building can safely handle.

They will absolutely not protect you from a lethal shock.

To protect people and animals from getting electric shocks you needs a different type of device known as a GFCI in the US or an RCD in Europe and some other parts of the world.
These work by comparing the current on both sides of a circuit and if there's a difference beyond a certain preset level (low enough to prevent leathal shock) they trip.
These are very common in Europe (mandatory for a long time in many countries) but, as far as I am aware, would not be required on US 240V circuits.
 
I was perusing Shpock a boot sale app the other day and came across this Siemens Vario perfect washer.
It would seem to be a relatively unused machine as its got no mould and is in lovely condition I have not tested it out yet as need to bring it home and put a UK plug on it as its got a German one as it was brought over by some military family who bought a house with a integrated washer so it has sat in a garage unused. Now the reason I got it was I like to have a spare washer around due to people I know who ask if I have one to sell/loan or to use while fixing theirs. So as you can see it is in its mother tongue but its so simple to use the only button I am not sure of is " Knitter schutz " Oh and for the grand sum of £20

Austin[this post was last edited: 10/3/2017-04:06]

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"1) the change of a fire due to overload is much lower. (its more difficult to overload a 220V circuit)"

Thats what circuit breakers are for. They disconnect long before the wire itself is hot enough to start a fire. Second because 240 volt circuits can carry twice the power, they will run twice as many lights and/or receptacles. No electrician will limit a 3,600 watt residential circuit to 1,800. Also code requires 3va per foot minimum when determining how many general use circuits, so a 2,000sqft home could either be wired with 4 120 volt 15 amp circuits, 3 120 volt 20amp circuits OR 2 240 volt 15 amp circuits...

"2) The shock itself is dangerous (or twice dangerous), but safety devices, like circuit breakers, DR, etc have a minimal (but existent) change to go off faster than 110V, exactly because of the higher voltage. So ok, the shock itself is worse, but it may last a fraction of second less. and it can be the difference between life and death."

Typical shock currents are in the milli-amp range as well as fatal levels. 1 amp is considered very lethal. To trip any residential breaker you need to go above the handle rating, and to trip the breaker instantaneously you need at least 10 to 20x the handle rating. Which means if a person being shocked is passing 18 amps the breaker will probably never open, they would need to pass 25 amps to trip a 15 amp breaker in 60-90 seconds, and 150 to 300 amps to trip the breaker in a fraction of a second.

150 to 300amps for a fraction of a second passing through a person's body would cause severe, fatal burns. There is a graph I can post which shows the duration of shock vs magnitude the body can tolerate to a certain point.
 
Curve

Here is the shock duration vs magnitude curve taken from IEC/TR-61200-413 report. Note that we are talking mill-amps, not amps and mill-seconds, not seconds. The various zones/bonds are explained in the next linked picture. In other words, just 1 amp for a fraction of a second will cause serve burns.

And here is the curve in color:

https://www.google.com/search?q=IEC...7dTWAhVF2GMKHbfrBLYQ_AUICygC&biw=1120&bih=566

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*milli

Forgot the "i" there. I miss things all the time with spell check turned off. I turned it off because it comes with auto-correct on my computer which means anything I typed turned into a very different meaning lol.
 
These are the only genuine indesit washers, the others are just a brand on an Ariston machine.Its just like putting a Zenith label on a lg television...

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