It’s not the voltage that kills you, it’s the amps. I’ve been hit by 20,000 volts several times.
Nope.
Here are considerations from an Electrical Engineer.
Power kills. Both Volts & Amps kill after a threshold.
20,000 Volts @ 1 micro Amp is Safe.
20,000 Amps @ 1 micro Volt is Safe, also.
Human body resistance is key. 2000 Volts at sufficient Amps breaks down body resistance, since we are 98% water.
After breakdown, Power & Amps kill.
2000 Volts is also needed for a fast electric charge used for a human transporter, like a car, due to the high Power needed, such as in units of horsepower.
But unfortunately, 2000 Volts is also the breakdown volts to quickly and determinately kill a human.
High Amps is required for battery charging but will also kill a human.
Good luck protecting such a device in the home while junior is tinkering with the gadget.
The Power required to charge a “transporter” is quite high and very dangerous for home use.
Chemical Power is more stable. After years of searching for a safe and stable Power source, inventors came upon gasoline. Gasoline at Standard Pressure and Volume is stable. It is liquid, not gas, not solid. It is energy dense.
If you wish to challenge 100 years of Science, give it a shot. Democrats reinvent science with emotion, like alternative energy, and BOOM! Kills.
Alternative energy requires MANDATES to keep the scam afloat.
Science says there is no free lunch, only trade offs.
Electricity is great for low power flexibility like hair dryers and refrigerators.
Chemical gasoline is great for bulk high power like moving a heavy vehicle or a lawnmower.
The only exception I see are parallel circuits to keep high Voltage low, such as, 20 parallel circuits to drop 2000 Volts down to 100 Volts. But that is another discussion on safety. But the Power must still be unsafely high for home usage. One electrical short in the cable and BOOM, BURN, there goes your entire house.
If I remember correctly, the power I calculated, just to charge an electric car quickly, equivalently, you are running “10 to 20 air conditioners” SIMULTANEOUSLY in the home. No exceptions.