how painful is a torpedo ray shock?

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ballastbelly

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I came across one this weekend but although it was very relaxed in our presence, i didnt get the close of shots of it i wished as i was unsure
of how the shock works, does it electrify the water? does it knock you out or sort of zap you like when you touch a spark plug lead on a car engine?

anyone know some one who had been though this?
thanks
b
 
thanks, in that post there are a half dozen ppl who got shocked & a link to Electrogenesis in Torpedo Rays
which says the torpedo rays shock lasts less than 5ms, where to kill humans outright it needs to last from 20-200ms at least.

most of the ppl shocked didnt realize what happened, some even thinking it was lightning, a bigger danger could be a panic ascent after a shock
 
anyone know some one who had been though this?
thanks
b

Never shocked but was barged into by one. I thought it was very rude. But what was really freaky was his ability to effortlessly pivot on a dime and then stare me down with his beady little eyes. (This occurred on San Clemente Island, by the way)

It's been a long time since I took a class in electricity but it seems to me that the inductive materials used by divers - namely neoprene - would make it hard for a serious shock to occur.
 
I appreciated Scared Silly's link; from that thread, one person got burned badly enough stepping on one that he couldn't wear shoes for awhile, and another person got a large melt mark on a wet suit. That suggests to me that at least some of them can bring the pain.

Bopper's comment about divers in insulating exposure suits is well-taken, but assuming these things occur in the tropics, we don't all wear wet suits!

Richard.
 
I assume that these are similar to numbrays in Australian waters. I have been hit twice. The first one deliberately hit me as I was taking a photo of it. I ended up with pins and needles in my hand and lower arm for about 45 minutes. My upper arm was sore for about 4 hours, although this could have been as a result of pulling my arm back quickly as I got hit. The second one I put my hand on as I hit the sand bottom under a wreck after a very hard descent into a current. This one shocked me but there was no pain as the shock was far less than the first one.
 
During one of Cousteau's television programs one of his divers got zapped at the Channel Islands in California. The diver convulsed for a couple of seconds and reported that it felt like sticking his finger in a light socket.
 
I appreciated Scared Silly's link; from that thread, one person got burned badly enough stepping on one that he couldn't wear shoes for awhile, and another person got a large melt mark on a wet suit. That suggests to me that at least some of them can bring the pain.

Bopper's comment about divers in insulating exposure suits is well-taken, but assuming these things occur in the tropics, we don't all wear wet suits!

Richard.

We have then here in New England. One hangs out at a very popular dive site in Jamestown RI. I've read reports of these shocking creatures as far north as Cape Ann, MA. Never been zapped.
 
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I had one of those big things charge at me off the 853, but didn't get me. Of course I had been harassing him a little as he lay in the sand so I could get a better shot. I have the whole thing on video including him knocking the reel out of my hand and causing a birds nest. Bastard.


Please pardon any typos. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
I accidentally knelt on one - I was messing with my camera and put a knee on the sand - I believe it contacted the rubber pad on my wetsuit (5/7mm) I can tell you I shot up and wondered why I'd felt an electric current ripple through me - it wasn't as bad as a 240V shock - more like a 110V AC shock. It left me tingling for a short while. fortunately even here in the warn waters I dive no less than a 3mm - i wouldn't have like to have taken a skin belt if wearing a shorty. Definitely NOT to be recommended - but my own fault for not looking (and kneeling at all!)
 

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