@LoganT547

This means the connected circuit on the other end will never receive any power as the diodes block either direction 😂

@5gamerz3125

I see many problems with this video.
1. Diodes facing the same direction so no current flow
2. (edit) The diodes shown in the video are probably the common 1N4007 diodes, they can sustain the 220V AC power, but they're going the same direction so there's no current flow anyway
3. Why the wavy copper wire? doesn't really do anything beside just barely increasing inductance/impedance which doesn't even really matter since there cannot even be any current flow, (edit) and even if the current did flow the right way it would make it into a heater and possibly melt the wire.
4. Very dangerous, just touch both wired or 1 with ground and you have a risk of getting electrocuted, or by touching the hot metal itself
5. What does this experiment even prove? if it was a actually 2 diodes going the right way then it would just short circuit the outlet's power terminals, with GFCI it would just pop, (edit) however the wires would melt first because they are like heaters and would melt before the breaker had a chance to pop.

I'm not an expert in electronics especially in high voltage.
dont take any of this too seriously, I can make errors and i just want to warn others not to even think about doing something like this.

just dont try it.

thanks to @roystone5232 and @jakeyy0 that helped clear some misconceptions

@TheEvade84

-Very small leakage current through diodes (nA to low µA)
-Tiny voltage across wire/resistor/load (up to a few mV)
- Capacitive coupling may show faint 60Hz ripple
- Reverse recovery spikes minimal at 60Hz but still measurable with fast diodes
- Thermal noise and parasitic effects remain present
- No meaningful current flow, but not absolute zero

Pls show us with ur oscilloscope.


And 📌 this

@woopiter7259

What is the purpose of connecting two diodes with a copper wire? It is not a short-circuit protection circuit. If the diode is connected in the wrong direction, the 220V AC will burn it instantly. If it is broken down, it may cause a line fire, which is very dangerous.

@Therandom1ツ-db

"I tried learning electronics, but I short-circuited so many times that now even my brain overheats!"

@mariobv947

Those socket plugs give me anxiety.

@adamjensen5350

Опять, эти открывшие для себя физику в зрелом возрасте...

@rahulkamble2717

Without Resistor How Its working Without any Short

@electric-p4f

অসাধারণ

@frankalabastro2664

From live out through diode bar one way half wave rectification negative output...from neutral out through diode bar one way halfwave rectification only negative out? Two negatives joined by resistive wire?! Zilch! You filtered the negative from both the ac live and neutral thats all ,reverse two more diodes and face them both opposite way u might get a b...

@binuelectricals1651

This shows the bro does not believe him self 
He kept the circuit in one extension board and he gone abroad with the wire to connect and on that circuit 😂😂😂

@SuyebAhmed-x9h

❤❤❤

@WattWonder

The only current flow is the neutral

@kokostarsreindyoz4134

Both diodes provide negative current so nothing will happen

@ramsuro

Особенно когда два диода включены последовательно в противоположном направлении относительно друг-друга)))

@moininto-max9443

https://youtube.com/shorts/g0FdjRjnyXY?feature=shared

@ChandanPaswan-e3g

😮😮😮😮😊😊😊😊🎉🎉❤❤❤❤

@Jaiplays6868

Be careful he's always watching:electric boom

@poojapooja-mt4zm

😅😅😅😅😂😂