Anyone who thinks mains voltages are anything to carelessly play with may want to reflect on this:
Long time ago as a young EE i used to work for Stromberg, now part of ABB. While debugging the controls of a big 3 phase frequency converter i needed to measure the mains supply whether it was there or not. It was late, i was tired and the measuring gear was not what you would call safe today - an analog Metrix multimeter with no safety plug wires. So my fingers slipped and i ended getting full 400 volt mains righteously from one hand to the other.
Let me tell you it was like being struck by lightning. It was instant lights out and judging from the chaos in the lab i sailed over the workbench at some speed. Waking on the floor a couple minutes later the heartbeat felt decidedly funny and i did not feel at all like getting up. Took quite some time to get on my feet and and more than a week to raise my arms above shoulder level. All the joints were stretched to near breaking point at the time. Also funny that i have never been able to recall the last couple of minutes before the zap. Must have been some kind of brain reboot. However, looking at the fingers it was obvious which way the current went - there were small but clear burn marks in the fingers of both hands, like pressing your digit on a hot plate for a moment...
So anyone tells you mains voltages are harmless, do understand it is dangerous bullshit. Even the household current will effortlessly get you if you manage to hook yourself as part of the circuit.
While working at Stromberg i got to see and visit places not seen by just everyone and occasionally saw what high voltages and currents can do. Sometimes you don't even need to get an actual shock. It might be enough to stand too close to a high voltage short to buy the farm when stuff starts flying at high speed. Seen brick walls crumble and fly like deer shot when a high power breaker fails; seen bones break when guys stand in the way of grounding cables and some moron engages the 25 kV disconnector...
I decided not to win the Darwin award, at least not this way. So in addition to care and respect, isolation transformers rule in my workshop...