actually i've had a couple of lightbulbs explode on me, i was watching one at the time... big boom![/QUOTE]
mind power...
actually i've had a couple of lightbulbs explode on me, i was watching one at the time... big boom![/QUOTE]
mind power...
I've changed light bulbs with the power still on many times by the way, have I just been lucky?
I've changed light bulbs with the power still on many times by the way, have I just been lucky?
Sorry, already taken haha![]()
Not helping!But serious, my dad taught me things like this and the fuse box and things. I even know a small amount about cars, for when I eventually start driving. I find it sad a male does not know how to fix this problem![]()
actually i've had a couple of lightbulbs explode on me, i was watching one at the time... big boom!
mind power...
![]()
Not helping!![]()
Pure co-incidence but it was that i happened to be looking at the bulb just as i turned it on.![]()
your house is haunted, burn it down and exorcise yourself
Out of interest, how dangerous is a standard domestic lighting socket? If it's live and you get a shock from it, is it likely to be fatal or just painful? Although painful could be fatal if you have an unlucky fall off whatever you're standing on to reach it.
The guy can't change a ****ing Light Bulb, how's doing some diagnostics going to help? If you gave him a Multi-Meter he'd probably stick the probes in his ears, wonder where the music was and eventually choke to death trying to eat it.
You have a bad circuit somewhere, it's poor wiring that's causing it, my living room light has it, i have about a bulb go every 2 months, it's quite a nerving thing. It's quite a bang and the glass shatters ebverywhere. I keep meaing to get an electrician but also keep forgetting. I should say that i was using 100W bulbs but dropped them down to 6oW.
As far as I am aware domestic lighting sockets in the UK are always on the same circuit for at least an entire floor in a house (unless the house is so big that it has more lighting than could be served by one standard circuit). So as far as I am aware you could check by turning on the other lights on that floor and flicking the switch to 'off' on the fusebox - if the rest of the lights go out, there's no power to the one with the broken bulb in it. Probably. As far as I know.
Out of interest, how dangerous is a standard domestic lighting socket? If it's live and you get a shock from it, is it likely to be fatal or just painful? Although painful could be fatal if you have an unlucky fall off whatever you're standing on to reach it.
Painful, I was a stupid child and decided to put my finger up a socket without a bulb in place, it hurts, but I'm still here, so it's either not fatal or I got lucky.
Done that as a childtho I actually thought I was being clever and turning off the switch - but didn't think to unplug it from the mains
and actually didn't switch it off either. Didn't hurt so much but my body tensed up a lot and then I jumped back, nasty salty taste in mouth and almost blacked out for a moment.
As far as being fatal, depends a bit how the current passes through your body, a healthy adult where it doesn't pass across the heart would rarely be fatal but it can quite easily be especially if you have a heart condition, etc.
As far as being fatal, depends a bit how the current passes through your body, a healthy adult where it doesn't pass across the heart would rarely be fatal but it can quite easily be especially if you have a heart condition, etc.