Wouldn’t it be determined by the resistance of saliva? 5a=5v/1ohm
This raised my eyebrow as well because the voltage can also be 12vdc at very low amperage and I can’t see how it can do any damage unless the child had one end in her mounth and tried to plug the other end into a 120vac wall socket.
Helluva lot more than 5 volts involved here I would imagine.
Step one ... don't leave things on the floor that are plugged into the wall.
Sad case ... I hope the child recovers completely.
I was thinking the child’s weight could also have been a factor. But I don’t know....
My little ones can’t get enough of the computer peripheral cords. We promptly take them away but they are fascinated by them for some reason. Hard to blame someone for a kid getting a usb cord.
That said, this story has to be total fluke, bs, or both. It’s not too far flung to think someone else has gotten liquid (coffee, soda, etc.) onto a desk and usb cable. No way this “danger” is possible in today’s hyper-litigious society.
The USB controlling specification defines the limits put in place on the USB interface, for reasons having to do with this exact scenario.
The USB 1.x and 2.0 specifications provide a 5 V supply on a single wire from which connected USB devices may draw power. The specification provides for no more than 5.25 V and no less than 4.75 V (5 V±5%) between the positive and negative bus power lines. For USB 2.0 the voltage supplied by low-powered hub ports is 4.4 V to 5.25 V.[30]
A unit load is defined as 100 mA in USB 2.0, and was raised to 150 mA in USB 3.0. A maximum of 5 unit loads (500 mA) can be drawn from a port in USB 2.0, which was raised to 6 (900 mA) in USB 3.0. There are two types of devices: low-power and high-power. Low-power devices draw at most 1 unit load, with minimum operating voltage of 4.4 V in USB 2.0, and 4 V in USB 3.0. High-power devices draw the maximum number of unit loads supported by the standard. All devices default as low-power but the device's software may request high-power as long as the power is available on the providing bus.[31]
So, lets put some numbers to this. The default starting point is 5.25 Volts (maximum) with a limit of no more than 500mA (unless the child's mouth perfectly micked a USB 3.0 interface and communicated a software packet requesting additional power (sorry, no human's mouth will do that).
Power equals voltage multiplied by current. Thus, 5.25 Volts x .05 Amps = 2.625 Watts.
2.625 Watts is NOT going to do the damage to an infant that this article states. It's far more likely the infant stuck an extension cord in his mouth - I believe the parents are lying about the USB cable, as the math just doesn't work.
Actual title is: “Shocked toddler is now stable”
I think pelicandriver’s title should be kept in brackets for explanation, though...
“Shocked toddler is now stable [Toddler burned by USB cable]”
I’m fairly sure that if this sort of damage was done the power supply failed... My phone is connected via a micro usb charger which is plugged right into the wall.
Yes, the output should only be a few volts on the USB connector end, but if the converter failed for some reason, it certainly could deliver far more.
This child’s heart stopped, that’s not remotely possible with proper output on a USB delivering proper juice.
A properly functioning USB port/cable should not deliver that sort of power. It seems that either 1)The cable in question was a ground path, and the child touched some electrical source. Or, 2) A failure caused the USB cable to be energized at line voltage, and the child touched some grounded object.
Ummm...was the other end of the USB cable inserted in a computer or a 120VAC outlet....?
ping
There’s too much circuitry between the power supply and the USB bus for a malfunction to create that much juice without frying the rest of the motherboard first. I can’t think of any peripheral cable on a PC that could do that much damage, except maybe an ethernet cable plugged into a Power-over-Ethernet switch that also runs a phone, but then you’d only get a big shock like that if ringer voltage were sent, and PoE is rare in private homes.
The USB was plugged into a laptop computer on the floor that had been turned off and was plugged into the wall socket to recharge.