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We're Charging Our Cars Wrong

1 pointsby Brajeshwar3 months ago

1 comment

unbalancedevh3 months ago
I found this statement to be confusing (the bolded part):<p>&gt; Moreover, because the two ground circuits are mutually independent, no single failure can cause both grounds to fail. *This lowers the probability of a ground failure*: If the probability of a single ground failure is P, the probability of both failing is P2.<p>If there are 2 independent systems with the same failure modes, the probability of a single failure goes up. The probability that <i>both</i> fail is lower -- but I&#x27;m not sure what they mean by &quot;P2.&quot; I&#x27;m pretty sure it isn&#x27;t &quot;P squared&quot;, if that&#x27;s what they&#x27;re implying, since if one succumbs to a failure mode that&#x27;s shared by both, then it&#x27;s somewhat <i>more</i> likely that the second will also fail.<p>I think, though, that by &quot;probability of a ground failure&quot; they&#x27;re not referring to any ground failure, which unfortunately still renders the system inoperable; they&#x27;re referring to a complete lack of ground connection, such that the system would be unsafe.