
| H3f - 2/24/2026 00:33 You admit you are wrong when state you are going to wait for the capacitor to discharge. There is "leakage" in the fence to allow the capacitor to discharge. If the fence is touching a steel fence post you won't have to wait, probably don't even need to unplug the fencer as the electricity is being "used" in the short. Charge a condenser and leave it on a wood workbench for a while and then grab the wire as you are holding the condenser in your hand. I'll try another way. Think of the grid as a fuel tank. The grid operator tries to maintain a certain level in the fuel tank instead of running to empty and then refilling. He/She will try to refill at a variable rate as the level falls below the required level. But hey I am a mere mortal so I doubt I have your smarts
The capacitor stores 1 shock momentarily, not the fence. The fencer doesn’t even need to be connected to the fence for the capacitor to discharge its shock. How long after you shut a breaker off on an unused circuit in your house do you have to wait for the electric to drain off of the wire?
The “grid” does NOT store electric. If it did, there would be no talk of building huge batteries to store solar power.
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