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#108942 12/30/03 10:31 PM
Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 3,682
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[Linked Image]

[Linked Image]
Quote
Care for a swim?

your average pool pump motor here, temporarily made to one of the many x-cords on the job so the kids can take a dip...no gfi....no bonding...no worries....

Steve aka sparky

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#108943 12/30/03 11:28 PM
Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 1,081
T
Member
But the surge suppressor has a fuse in it, right?

#108944 12/30/03 11:49 PM
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 147
C
Member
Sure! A fuse is what protects everyone (in a miraculous manor) from every conceivable electrical fault.

#108945 12/31/03 12:00 AM
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 147
C
Member
Please pardon my sarcasm, I've heard too many people say "Its protected by a fuse, what could possibly go wrong"

#108946 12/31/03 08:22 AM
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 7,520
P
Member
Another quality installation..... [Linked Image]

Quote
"Its protected by a fuse, what could possibly go wrong"
I don't doubt that the primary feed to the electric chair is also protected by a fuse! [Linked Image]

#108947 12/31/03 01:11 PM
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 152
M
Member
Yes, Paul! That's is exactly what we need. Someone needs to start a thread about the wiring/feeding/currents of the electric chairs in use today. Why don't you start one in an appropriate group? I'd bet most would find it fascinating.

#108948 12/31/03 03:41 PM
Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 8,443
Likes: 3
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Mean Gene,
There was a thread about this very subject (Electric chairs)posted in the Non-US Area a wee while back. [Linked Image]

#108949 12/31/03 03:46 PM
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 289
:
Member
is that a plug transformer with broken housing on the right?

#108950 12/31/03 04:07 PM
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 152
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Trumpy:

Thanks! I going to look for it right now. I'm sorry to admit I never look in that group, assuming I'll never find anything of interest to me there. You just taught me a valuable lesson my friend! [Linked Image] [Linked Image] [Linked Image]

#108951 12/31/03 04:13 PM
Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 1,691
S
Member
Andy, some "wall warts" (normally the AC-to-AC ones only; essentially a stepdown trafo without the rectifier & filter assembly for converting to DC) have a pair of screw terminals to attach wire to them.

These are commonly used for alarm installations and sometimes come with a little tab on the opposite end so you can put the wall plate screw for a duplex American recptacle through them and that way they remain plugged in permanently (permanent in the sense that you need to first undo the cover plate screw before you can pull the plug).

The AC-to-DC (trafo with rectifier & filters) and most other AC-to-AC warts for consumer equipment have a hard-wired cord going through a strain relief bushing.

[This message has been edited by SvenNYC (edited 12-31-2003).]

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