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I remember back in the old days, people used to put a NAIL in-place of an actual fuse. Hardly safe...
Especially when it would get hot enough to start a fire and also get the connections so hot that they would become unsoldered.
I remember back in the old days, people used to put a NAIL in-place of an actual fuse. Hardly safe...
And we all remember the "Christmas tree."
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Aah yeah, I remember that. I confess to doing that. But I've since got my hands on some proper outlet-boards, so that the load is more evenly-spread.
Though you have to admit that, as hazardous as it is, the "Christmas Tree" is more vintage-looking.![]()
Also, as a warning, wear rubber soled shoes whenever you plug something in that you are worried about it's condition. Also keep your hands off anything else to keep from completing the circuit.
Always good practice when dealing with any kind of electrical work. The rule among TV repair professionals was always to keep one hand in a pocket or behind one's back when working with high-voltage components.
I was working on a radio once years ago when I was really tired and had it plugged into the wall, and realized I was going to need to replace the power cord. Half asleep, I picked up a pair of diagonal cutters, and snipped the wire off the chassis while it was still plugged in. POW. The lights were out and I was on the floor.
Never do any kind of electrical work when you're tired. Most valuable lesson I ever learned.
I'l glad my wife doesn't read this site. She would probably insist on equally-extreme precautions, and I would never get anything re-wired.
I'd never in a million years have the nerve to mess with electrical work on that level, and reading this thread has confirmed that for me, especially since I've made some monumentally silly mistakes recently. I was trying to build my own extension cord from reproduction fabric-covered electrical wire and two 1930s-era plugs. Both plugs were in excellent condition. They seemed to be dead-stock so I felt safe using them. Dope that I am they were both "male" plugs. Right, right, I should have used one male and one female, so file that under "what was I thinking?" Well, I have quite a few of the 1930s male plugs, but I've never been able to find a female one, so I thought I could make it do somehow. Imagine my surprise when I plugged in one end and gave myself a pretty sharp shock when I picked up the other. A friend of mine was watching me do this & tried to warn me, but did I listen? He just shook his head and said, "you know that was live, right?"
I found a reasonable facsimile of a 1930s female plug in the local hardware store & the resulting extension cord is actually very pretty, so now I think I'm going to make a few more. I hope others will use my stupidity as a cautionary tale. It's okay to laugh.
It's perfectly fine to make mistakes like that, but you usually only make them once. I think I'll do a "how to rewire a lamp" piece here sometime soon.
I think I'll do a "how to rewire a lamp" piece here sometime soon.
I've never heard of an ironing mangle before today!