Farside
Badly Welded Man
- Messages
- 6,197
- Location
- Ireland
Careful use of supporting tape, switched outlet <tick>.
9/10, good effort.
Careful use of supporting tape, switched outlet <tick>.
Many years ago I built a fairly decent PC for a relllie.Voltage differences,
It was watching my uncle as a kid get an electric shock that got both myself and my brother into electrics in the first place.
We thought the power of it was amazing and wanted him to do it again!
Would have been nasty though at that time, early 80's rewirable fuses the same as would have been in @Onoff s board above!
Still amazed by it now after nearly 30 years in the game!!
As was probably the one at the house we were at!That board was put in in 1960.
That would have a line cord (resistance wire as one leg of mains cable) .That’s right - we’re dealing with AC, which doesn’t have a polarity. The L/N thing is a safety system we impose on it.
I have a Bush DAC90 valve radio which could originally be plugged in either way - one way would make the chassis live at 240V. It’s designed so you’d need something metal and poky to actually get a shock. I assume 1950’s children were more disciplined!
I made a fair bit of pocket money at school, fixing other kids' stereos after they'd tried the same thing "to see what happened".Many years ago I built a fairly decent PC for a relllie.
Her useless other half phoned up to tell me it wasn't working, eventually he admitted to switching the voltage selector to 110V.
"Why did you do that?"
" I thought it would run faster."
That would have a line cord (resistance wire as one leg of mains cable) .
Quite a few radios like that when I was an apprentice.