THAT Had To Hurt
Teen Survives 25,000-Volt Shock That Burned His Clothes Off
A 16-year-old in England somehow survived a 25,000-volt electrical shock from an overhead power line that burned his clothes off of his body, the Daily Mail reports.
Sam Cunningham was blown 25-feet off of a railway bridge onto the tracks below by the current. He had been retrieving a rugby ball on a bridge near his home in Wigan, England last Thursday when the current jumped from the electric railway lines to his steel toe boots, according to the report.
He was knocked unconscious by the fall and all his clothes were burned off, the teen’s mother told the Daily Mail.
Cunningham is being treated in the special burns unit at Whiston Hospital in Merseyside, England. He will need skin grafts but is expected to make a full recovery.
The teen is lucky to be alive.
“The current going through an overhead railway cable would easily be strong enough to kill somebody,” Phil Mawby, a professor of engineering at Warwick University, told the Daily Mail. “It would burn its way through the skin and in some cases stop a person’s heart.”
(FOX)
The kids time wasn’t up yet, lesson learned I would hope.
May 7th, 2008 at 7:47 amNow there’s a shocking experience for ya. I think Old Sparkie used to run at only 10,000 volts…someone correct me if I’m wrong.
May 7th, 2008 at 10:46 amIs it SOP to wear steel-toed boots to play rugby? Because if it isn’t, this kid is a punk.
May 7th, 2008 at 11:05 am