Okay, I know I haven't even started my 'Road Safety' thread yet, though I intend to sometime before I DIE, lol... but an incident occurred this afternoon as I cut my hair, using the Sunbeam hair clippers which I've had for nearly a quarter-century. I started cutting my own hair in the late '90s as a way of saving money, and also as a way of saving TIME, since I only had so many days off during my 'trucking daze' and I wanted to maximize enjoyment & recreation while minimizing all time-consuming BS, aye? And once I learned how to cut my own hair, using a mirror and some attachments for the clippers, it became an easy task which only took 10 or 15 minutes, tops. No waiting around at some barbershop or 'hair salon' (pfffffft), just a quick cut and on my way to burn steaks & drink beers in the back yard of the ol' beach cottage with friends, lol.
Now, over the years, the electrical cord on the clippers became damaged, as I had to hold it doubled back out of the way as I cut to either side of my fat head, 10-4? When it became sketchy, I taped it up with electrical tape and carried on, right? Well, today, all those years of doubling or bending the cord at a severe angle to keep it out of the way led to a bad break in wiring underneath the tape. I managed to cut my hair before I noticed how bad it was, as I'm very careful with all things electric. I was done with my haircut and I was gonna simply remove the last attachment and shave the hair off my shoulders, but I decided to tape up the cracked cord first. As I carefully put the cord in line to tape it... POW!!! A FRIGGIN' LOUD & WICKED ELECTRICAL SPARK put paid to the cord and the clippers, lol. I'm talking about a LETHAL SPARK, with a NASTY POP to it as well... plenty of folks get killed by 110 volts every year, and I don't wanna be one of 'em, so I trashed the clippers, lol.
I'm no newbie or rookie when it comes to electricity & electrical equipment, nor am I an IBEW pro, but I HAVE repaired or swapped out many electrical fixtures or appliances over the decades, and I have a 'system' for doing such work. I don't like 'hot work' or 'hot wiring' with the juice on, I don't feel sufficiently experienced to tackle that sort of work, and I don't have to either, lol. What I usually do is identify the problem, cut the power using circuit breakers (or by simply unplugging a device or fixture), then go to town on the repair, testing it very carefully afterward and looking for problems, right? This system has served me pretty well over the years, but today I came close to meeting the wild beast that ya never wanna let out of its cage... that's a reference to author Dick Francis, who wrote about horse racing and murder mysteries. In one of his books, the protagonist recalls an uncle who was an electrician, and that uncle likened electricity to a wild beast in a cage---if ya ever let it out, it would certainly KILL YOU, lol.
So my intent in creating this thread is to remind folks---no matter how experienced those folks might be---to BE CAREFUL when dealing with electricity! I used to work in construction (as a lowly laborer long ago), and I always paid attention to what the electricians said, as I knew my knowledge could be increased in that area. My seven older brothers taught me a lot about dealing with electricity, and I thank them, but it never hurt to listen to the pros. And one of those pros was the guy who told me that many folks die every year from 110 volts... so I paid attention to what he said, lol. I think we were discussing the relative merits, advantages, disadvantages, etc., of 110v versus 220v, aye? And I was an avid "student" or "apprentice" when it came to learning how to work with and around electricity. That's the sort of work I NEVER do if I've had anything to drink, or if I've actually taken a bong hit... no future in THAT, lol. Okay, that's about it for this thread, unless somebody else wants to chime in and possibly teach youngsters...
Electricity is one of those unforgiving things that will seriously injure or kill an inattentive person, or a stoned person, or an ignorant person, etc. It does NOT discriminate, I assure you, so it behooves one to be extra careful when dealing with it. Some of y'all may have seen or read those stories on linemen who work on those high-voltage lines out in the middle of nowhere? Jeez, I could NEVER do that job, though I'm a former technical rock climber and I am comfortable working at height, lol. The juice is just too powerful, ya know? And if ya ever slip up, yer gonna be an 'Extra Crispy Skeleton' dangling from a harness high above the ground, lol... if the harness isn't also damaged and ya take an unroped fall to the deck below. I don't care how much money those guys (and gals) make, it ain't enough for THIS kid! I've had a couple of close calls with electricity, including today's incident, and DESPITE taking precautions... so I'll leave the high-dollar lineman's work to the pros! Enough said, now I'm back to the site to see what's happening before I make beef fajitas for dinner! Here are the old Sunbeam clippers, now RETIRED in the TRASH BIN, lol.
P.S. I pulled the tape further back to show y'all the exposed wiring... "YIKES!!!" Didn't know it was THAT bad!!! Sure made an UGLY NOISE like HELL WAS A-POPPIN'!!! Good thing my hand was nowhere near the POS at the time!
Now, over the years, the electrical cord on the clippers became damaged, as I had to hold it doubled back out of the way as I cut to either side of my fat head, 10-4? When it became sketchy, I taped it up with electrical tape and carried on, right? Well, today, all those years of doubling or bending the cord at a severe angle to keep it out of the way led to a bad break in wiring underneath the tape. I managed to cut my hair before I noticed how bad it was, as I'm very careful with all things electric. I was done with my haircut and I was gonna simply remove the last attachment and shave the hair off my shoulders, but I decided to tape up the cracked cord first. As I carefully put the cord in line to tape it... POW!!! A FRIGGIN' LOUD & WICKED ELECTRICAL SPARK put paid to the cord and the clippers, lol. I'm talking about a LETHAL SPARK, with a NASTY POP to it as well... plenty of folks get killed by 110 volts every year, and I don't wanna be one of 'em, so I trashed the clippers, lol.
I'm no newbie or rookie when it comes to electricity & electrical equipment, nor am I an IBEW pro, but I HAVE repaired or swapped out many electrical fixtures or appliances over the decades, and I have a 'system' for doing such work. I don't like 'hot work' or 'hot wiring' with the juice on, I don't feel sufficiently experienced to tackle that sort of work, and I don't have to either, lol. What I usually do is identify the problem, cut the power using circuit breakers (or by simply unplugging a device or fixture), then go to town on the repair, testing it very carefully afterward and looking for problems, right? This system has served me pretty well over the years, but today I came close to meeting the wild beast that ya never wanna let out of its cage... that's a reference to author Dick Francis, who wrote about horse racing and murder mysteries. In one of his books, the protagonist recalls an uncle who was an electrician, and that uncle likened electricity to a wild beast in a cage---if ya ever let it out, it would certainly KILL YOU, lol.
So my intent in creating this thread is to remind folks---no matter how experienced those folks might be---to BE CAREFUL when dealing with electricity! I used to work in construction (as a lowly laborer long ago), and I always paid attention to what the electricians said, as I knew my knowledge could be increased in that area. My seven older brothers taught me a lot about dealing with electricity, and I thank them, but it never hurt to listen to the pros. And one of those pros was the guy who told me that many folks die every year from 110 volts... so I paid attention to what he said, lol. I think we were discussing the relative merits, advantages, disadvantages, etc., of 110v versus 220v, aye? And I was an avid "student" or "apprentice" when it came to learning how to work with and around electricity. That's the sort of work I NEVER do if I've had anything to drink, or if I've actually taken a bong hit... no future in THAT, lol. Okay, that's about it for this thread, unless somebody else wants to chime in and possibly teach youngsters...
Electricity is one of those unforgiving things that will seriously injure or kill an inattentive person, or a stoned person, or an ignorant person, etc. It does NOT discriminate, I assure you, so it behooves one to be extra careful when dealing with it. Some of y'all may have seen or read those stories on linemen who work on those high-voltage lines out in the middle of nowhere? Jeez, I could NEVER do that job, though I'm a former technical rock climber and I am comfortable working at height, lol. The juice is just too powerful, ya know? And if ya ever slip up, yer gonna be an 'Extra Crispy Skeleton' dangling from a harness high above the ground, lol... if the harness isn't also damaged and ya take an unroped fall to the deck below. I don't care how much money those guys (and gals) make, it ain't enough for THIS kid! I've had a couple of close calls with electricity, including today's incident, and DESPITE taking precautions... so I'll leave the high-dollar lineman's work to the pros! Enough said, now I'm back to the site to see what's happening before I make beef fajitas for dinner! Here are the old Sunbeam clippers, now RETIRED in the TRASH BIN, lol.
P.S. I pulled the tape further back to show y'all the exposed wiring... "YIKES!!!" Didn't know it was THAT bad!!! Sure made an UGLY NOISE like HELL WAS A-POPPIN'!!! Good thing my hand was nowhere near the POS at the time!
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