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PetrichorBirth

PetrichorBirth

Student
Mar 5, 2024
108
Interesting, thanks for sharing. I wonder if it was quick/if any pain was involved?
 
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Alex Fermentopathy

Alex Fermentopathy

Experienced
Feb 25, 2024
239
Interesting, thanks for sharing. I wonder if it was quick/if any pain was involved?
Judging by his arms position, It seems like it was not totally painless. But I feel like it was worth it.
 
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PetrichorBirth

PetrichorBirth

Student
Mar 5, 2024
108
Judging by his arms position, It seems like it was not totally painless. But I feel like it was worth it.
Not sure if arm position says anything about pain. Electrocutions make your muscles contract, so it makes sense that his arms cramp together like that
 
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Alex Fermentopathy

Alex Fermentopathy

Experienced
Feb 25, 2024
239
Not sure if arm position says anything about pain. Electrocutions make your muscles contract, so it makes sense that his arms cramp together like that
But you feel it for some time. I have read that after the heart has stopped, one would be consciousness for about 10-20 seconds.
 
Alex Fermentopathy

Alex Fermentopathy

Experienced
Feb 25, 2024
239
Interesting, thanks for sharing. I wonder if it was quick/if any pain was involved?
People who was shocked in the heart by their pacemaker said it was very painful. Still, this method has something very appealing to me.
 
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ijustwishtodie

ijustwishtodie

death will be my ultimate bliss
Oct 29, 2023
3,160
This is the first (and most likely last) thing that is motivating me to do well in my electrical and electronics engineering course
 
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J

J&L383

Specialist
Jul 18, 2023
325
Seems risky. Death row inmates get current and voltages much higher ("electric chair" method) and it takes a while to kill them, (and not peacefully).
 
Alex Fermentopathy

Alex Fermentopathy

Experienced
Feb 25, 2024
239
Seems risky. Death row inmates get current and voltages much higher ("electric chair" method) and it takes a while to kill them, (and not peacefully).
In the electric chair, electrodes are connected to the head. The skull most likely has a higher resistance than the rib cage, so a higher voltage is required.

Besides, I was thinking about the electric chair, why they did not chose the method of this guy, and I have the impression that they had chosen the electric chair not because it's more effective, but because it allows to sell more costly stuff at public expense.
 
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Pikmin

Pikmin

Member
Mar 6, 2024
63
In the electric chair, electrodes are connected to the head. The skull most likely has a higher resistance than the rib cage, so a higher voltage is required.

Besides, I was thinking about the electric chair, why they did not chose the method of this guy, and I have the impression that they had chosen the electric chair not because it's more effective, but because it allows to sell more costly stuff at public expense.
The point of the electric chair and lethal injection is suffering. If they could get away with making you swallow Lego until you died, they would.
 
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Alex Fermentopathy

Alex Fermentopathy

Experienced
Feb 25, 2024
239
Seems risky. Death row inmates get current and voltages much higher ("electric chair" method) and it takes a while to kill them, (and not peacefully).
What can go wrong with this in your opinion? For me it seems less risky than most (if not all) other popular and accessible methods. It will not hurt your brain untill it hurts your heart enough so it stops pumping blood. I had a conversation with cardiologist recently and he said he never read about a case when the heart spontaneously recovers from the cardiac arrest due to an electrical shock, and that it occurs very rarely in cases when cardiac arrest was not due to an electrical shock.
 
Alex Fermentopathy

Alex Fermentopathy

Experienced
Feb 25, 2024
239
Interesting, thanks for sharing. I wonder if it was quick/if any pain was involved?
New information from peacemaker users:
Electric shock to the heart can or cannot hurt depending on electrical power going through it.
34 joules – not felt at all.
5 joules is felt and perceived as a surprising shock, with chest compression and a creating a sound.
10 joules is probably the worst of all.
So I think to get as many joules as possible it would be useful to connect wires not directly to the skin, but to the cotton pad or some sponge soaked in salt water (as like in the electric chair method they use a sponge and a salt water).


Also I think it makes sense to tape the wires to the both sides of the chest, like in defibrillator use, so to be as far from backbone as possible.

1713452422004
 
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Alex Fermentopathy

Alex Fermentopathy

Experienced
Feb 25, 2024
239
Also I think it makes sense to tape the wires to the both sides of the chest, like in defibrillator use, so to be as far from backbone as possible.
New information. A cardiologist said that "front and back" electrodes position is better and is used in hospital. Standard position (as in the picture above) just is less time consuming to access.
 
Silent_cries

Silent_cries

I wish I could delete my trauma...
Aug 10, 2021
981
Would this be possible to do with every day objects? Chargers, plug in sockets etc.?
 
Alex Fermentopathy

Alex Fermentopathy

Experienced
Feb 25, 2024
239
Would this be possible to do with every day objects? Chargers, plug in sockets etc.?
Yes, that's how he did it. Just cleared the wires from the braid (2.5 cm) and twisted them.

Interesting, thanks for sharing. I wonder if it was quick/if any pain was involved?
Article says there were signs of rapid death.

Would this be possible to do with every day objects? Chargers, plug in sockets etc.?
That's more details from the article: An electrical plug with a two-core flat wire in white vinyl insulation is inserted into one of the surge protector sockets. The wire cores are flexible, multi-wire, copper. Each core has its own insulation in blue and brown colors. The outer insulation of the wire is removed over 30 cm from the free end. The wire strands in the area of the ends are exposed in sections 2.5 cm long; the copper wire fibers that make them up are longitudinally twisted.
 
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Silent_cries

Silent_cries

I wish I could delete my trauma...
Aug 10, 2021
981
Yes, that's how he did it. Just cleared the wires from the braid (2.5 cm) and twisted them.


Article says there were signs of rapid death.


That's more details from the article: An electrical plug with a two-core flat wire in white vinyl insulation is inserted into one of the surge protector sockets. The wire cores are flexible, multi-wire, copper. Each core has its own insulation in blue and brown colors. The outer insulation of the wire is removed over 30 cm from the free end. The wire strands in the area of the ends are exposed in sections 2.5 cm long; the copper wire fibers that make them up are longitudinally twisted.
Thank you, I'll look into this as a potentional ctb method.
 
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Alex Fermentopathy

Alex Fermentopathy

Experienced
Feb 25, 2024
239
I am thinking of taking Metamizole + Ibuprofen prior to electrocution. In my country I can get them without prescription. Any thoughts?
 
MortalVictim

MortalVictim

Member
Apr 23, 2024
7
So many ways to die; So few reasons to live. This isn't it.
 
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Alex Fermentopathy

Alex Fermentopathy

Experienced
Feb 25, 2024
239
The article does not say exactly what kind of scotch was used, it says that it was translucent. I think it's better to use fiberglass scotch because it's not flammable. Just ordered one.
 
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Nikitatos

Nikitatos

Experienced
Apr 10, 2024
235
Seems risky. Death row inmates get current and voltages much higher ("electric chair" method) and it takes a while to kill them, (and not peacefully).
A friend of mine had a husband who was a prison guard. They're pretty terrible human beings and torture inmates all the time. Wouldn't surprise me if those law & order crazies mess with the "electric chair method" to make it longer and more painful. Didn't someone do that in The Green Mile?

Human beings with unchecked power become bad human beings.
 
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Alex Fermentopathy

Alex Fermentopathy

Experienced
Feb 25, 2024
239
I just came up with an idea of using a conductive gel between the skin and the wire, so contact will be more reliable.
 
J

Jorms_McGander

Arcanist
Oct 17, 2023
476
Interesting, thanks for sharing. I wonder if it was quick/if any pain was involved?
Yes lots of pain is involved in firing off all the nerves between points A and B on your body. It is excruciating and you feel every second of it til you die. Unless I suppose, the current burns your nerves away before you die. If you've ever spent time looking at morbid shit, you'll see electrocutions. You can watch people writhing in pain while they are burning on fire from the amount of current, in some cases.
I just came up with an idea of using a conductive gel between the skin and the wire, so contact will be more reliable.
Attach the wires to needles and insert the needles into your skin to gain access to the electrolytic interior of the body.

Also get ready for a big hurtin'.
 
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Alex Fermentopathy

Alex Fermentopathy

Experienced
Feb 25, 2024
239
It is excruciating and you feel every second of it til you die.
At least I will know I will die, not to wake up with the feeling: "and what is that all?" like with some other popular methods.
 
J

Jorms_McGander

Arcanist
Oct 17, 2023
476
At least I will know I will die, not to wake up with the feeling: "and what is that all?" like with some other popular methods.
Indeed, electrocuting your heart should be a fairly lethal method. It's your consideration to make and I see you've failed with helium already and that no doubt influences your next decisions.

Best wishes
 
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Alex Fermentopathy

Alex Fermentopathy

Experienced
Feb 25, 2024
239
I decided to make a spiral to increse the contact area by 10 times (25 cm of bare wire instead of 2.5 cm). So it will either burn the skin less or allow for a more current.
Also on the photo a tool I used to strip the insulation from the wires, and a highly conductive gel for electrodes. Multicore copper cable.
 

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