No it doesn't. We have never seen it happen. Besides, I'm working with sticks and paper, not fabric and wood. There's a difference. I can also make that RC plane a mini F-35B if I had the supplies. Or I could make an entirely new plane.
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Lightning moves [b][i][u]at the speed of light[/u][/i][/b] You are right about ONE THING: We have NEVER actually witnessed the electron transfer process that IS electricity. Infact WE HAVE NEVER EVEN SEEN AN ELECTRON How ever using math [b][i][u]WE CAN MEASURE ELECTRICITY AND ELECTRONS[/u][/i][/b] but yea we have never actually seen ANY form of ENERGY [b][i][u]thats why its called energy[/u][/i][/b]
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[quote]Lightning moves [b][i][u]at the speed of light[/u][/i][/b][/quote] Holy shit you really are dumb. It comes nowhere close. If it moved at the speed of light, it would hit the single point trillions of times, not a few million.
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Edited by DarthBrando: 9/4/2015 5:06:39 AMThe giant bolt of lightning you see [b][i][u]is not electricity[/u][/i][/b] It is the left over wake of super heated plasma created by the electrons moving [b][i][u]at the speed of light[/u][/i][/b] from the cloud through the atmosphere to where ever the bolt hits. Again your jus proving your an idiot.
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[quote]The giant bolt of lightning you see [b][i][u]is not electricity[/u][/i][/b] It is the left over wake of super heated plasma created by the electrons moving [b][i][u]at the speed of light[/u][/i][/b] from the cloud through the atmosphere to where ever the bolt hits. Again your jus proving your an idiot.[/quote] Only light and hawking radiation moves at the speed of light. Go back to highschool physics. Your lack of a diploma is showing.
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In a vacuum the wave travels at the speed of light and almost that fast in air.-----> direct citation from electromagnetic waves section of below web page! https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_of_electricity [b][i][u]READ THE WHOLE DAM PAGE AND STFU[/u][/i][/b]
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-blam!- it. You have no Idea what I mean, do you? We have no way of measuring the speed. We would need billions of kms of length. The time of hoping simply isn't that fast. It's like saying I can move 3 atoms in distance the speed of light. To close of a distance to measure.
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Yea NO; We have the electron based atomic clock; This allows us to MEASURE ANYTHING moving at, near, or ABOVE the speed of light! (So long as we can record the passing by of the particle: THATS EXACTLY what super colliders ARE FOR!)
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[quote]-blam!- it. You have no Idea what I mean, do you? We have no way of measuring the speed. We would need billions of kms of length. The time of hoping simply isn't that fast. It's like saying I can move 3 atoms in distance the speed of light. To close of a distance to measure.[/quote]