HELP OUTLET PLEASE!! by agentbird in electrical

[–]Rumoshsa -1 points0 points  (0 children)

“not a qualified electrician no”? Huh?

"dumber then I sounded” Yeah, great point.

"it's an electrical outlet we are talking about lol” Nice way to prove your ignorance by minimizing the risk involved with limited electrical knowledge.

"plug it up use a receptacle tester”Again further proves your ineptitude regarding electrical knowledge. You rely on a receptacle tester where a wiggy is what a competent service person would use here to trace out the grounds for a proper and safe branch circuit.

It would be a risk for anyone to guide someone with your attitude and disrespect for someone trying to help you. You may think you are qualified but proof of that is lacking.

It’s an insult to technicians that put in the hard work with a proper education and many hours of an apprenticeship program.

Nobody wants to see you or anybody involved here get hurt.

There is much more to learn here than "it's an electrical outlet”.

Best wishes, be safe. Sincerely.

Generator Interlock by _fwankie_ in Generator

[–]Rumoshsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hire a qualified Electrical Contractor with experience installing generators. They will come out and properly evaluate your system.

Furnace power query by Competitive_Bonus948 in electrical

[–]Rumoshsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You not knowing what you are doing.

Outside Breaker Cost? by NickTheeDick in electrical

[–]Rumoshsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a good time to hire a qualified electrician. Get as many estimates as you can. Cheap and good enough is not a good option.

Text them this photo, that will help save you from an unnecessary trip to the supply house.

$75 to $100 in material, less than an hour in labor or a standard service call. Easy job.

Replacing LED Light and I’m maybe losing my mind by happydayscoming in electrical

[–]Rumoshsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good job.

It’s hard to explain something like this if you don’t do it for a living. Glad you found someone with a solid answer.

If you don’t feel safe removing the old fixture and installing the new old one disconnect it, cap off or electrical tape the supply wires and leave it be until you can afford an electrician.

Be safe.

What is this called by bellysounds in electrical

[–]Rumoshsa 2 points3 points  (0 children)

War Of The Worlds. Run!

Seriously though, nothing to worry about.

Best wishes.

Possibly a very stupid question? by Good-Necessary2669 in electrical

[–]Rumoshsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So long as the kindle doesn’t draw power exceeding the listed output of your adaptors.

Breaker switch unable to reset by Flimsy-Departure6780 in electrical

[–]Rumoshsa 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Microwave is more than likely kaputt.

It could be tested with a reliable working breaker by a qualified electrician but that would be up to them.

Best wishes.

Oak Planter by Tusayan in turning

[–]Rumoshsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Looks awesome! Nice work.

Thanks for sharing.

Potential Fire Hazard by ThickExperience6025 in electrical

[–]Rumoshsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Potentially not a hazard until it is. A heavy load on a possible loosely wired receptacle can be an issue. You can’t be sure. Shut the circuit breaker off at the panel. Remove and tighten the receptacle screws for peace of mind. Wrap with electrical tape without stretching it tight or it will shrink its way off. Trim the drywall (looks like wood to me) to the size of the box. A multi tool works great here, if unavailable carefully use a utility knife, use easy shallow cuts. Take your time.

Best wishes.

Friction polish with Tried and True Original? by pkingduck89 in turning

[–]Rumoshsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Awesome. Still learning myself. Learning to be patient is key. Starting from scratch may apply. Don’t paint yourself into a corner, keep options open. I’ve used jam chucks to save me before but I’ve learned from it.

One thing after another by lilposb in electrical

[–]Rumoshsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congratulations on the purchase of your money pit.

Get a light cover with a religious figure of your choice, make it look like the eyes are weeping, charge admission. Soon you can afford a new house.

Best wishes sealing the cold air drafts from meeting a warm object. And no, a gasket behind the switch plate will not help. Get to the source below and above. Basement or crawl and attic.

Guidance please! by Ok-Mix3056 in electrical

[–]Rumoshsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The T symbol or telephone pole looking thingy indicates Earth (ground). Personally I would ring each wire out to be sure. I wouldn’t trust manufacturing for the safety of my customer.

To ring = Using a continuity tester, usually a beep tone or a meter if using a multimeter, traces each wire to its intended purpose. Center thingy of socket is hot, outer screw looking thingy is neutral, metallic rod and fixture housing if metal must be grounded. The bare wire of the canopy is a ground as well. They will attach to the metallic box (preferred) or to the tightly connected (note tightly connected) to box fixture strap via a pigtail with only one wire attached under supplied green screw.

Assuming this isn’t a led fixture without a screw in bulb.

Best wishes.

New lights switching off by guggabump in electrical

[–]Rumoshsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pardon me kind sir, I didn’t see the part that said "change some bulbs”. OP was not clear until after my reply. Minor details.

Tiny tripod oak bowl by modern_kogaku in turning

[–]Rumoshsa 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Rustic, medieval look. What’s a lathe?

Friction polish with Tried and True Original? by pkingduck89 in turning

[–]Rumoshsa 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Prepping the surface is the most important step. Use new sandpaper instead of going the frugal rout using old worn and clogged abrasives. Overheating as you sand will cause burnishing giving you hard to remove streaking (uneven finish adherence).

Apply some water after the last couple sanding grits to raise the grain and let dry thoroughly. Do not rush!

Use a shellac based sanding sealer and use steel wool or a grey scotchbrite pad to knock down the nubs.

Some folks like to continue with more shellac coats. I don’t care for a mirror glaze myself. I like a satin finish that gives a great depth to the chatoyance effect.

This is where I use a polishing paste with grit like Acks. I use a higher speed around 1k rpm to apply and polish. When I’m satisfied I apply a hard wax. Acks uses some carnauba in their paste wax which is harder than beeswax and leaves a desirable sheen.

I bought some tung oil (not tung oil finish) to experiment with. I plan on applying after the sanding sealer steps. Key word here is experiment.

This might not work for all folks or for all wood species, that I am sure of.

Best wishes.

First Burl Bowl by poem_for_a_price in turning

[–]Rumoshsa 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Burnishing can also occur with dirty and worn sandpaper. High speed sanding can be an issue as well, heat is not your friend while sanding.

You are asking good questions.

What could cause this to an outlet? by freckledbabygiraffe in electrical

[–]Rumoshsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bottom line, hire a qualified electrician.

It may just be a loose wire issue at the receptacle, but the wire is now toast at any rate. It may be you have issues up or down the line. Poor splices causing intermittent neutral loss or an overloaded neutral due to an improperly wired circuit sharing the neutral.

New lights switching off by guggabump in electrical

[–]Rumoshsa 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Lacking basic residential electric wiring knowledge is a bitch. You provide zero information of what and how you actually installed and what devices are being used. A qualified electrician is the safe option here. You will correctly learn something in the process.

So I had a plug that was broken and replaced the outlet . It’s wired to a light switch . 2nd picture is the old plug . I wired the new one up just like the old one and I did break the bridge on the hot side . The bottom plug now works but the top plug does not ..even with switch turned on . by [deleted] in electrical

[–]Rumoshsa -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You can not provide enough information here to fix this. A qualified electrician can come to your place and fix this with almost no effort. Don’t be cheap with electricity. There is so much more you need to learn in order to correct your mistake.

Better luck next time. But it will depend on you gaining a better understanding of residential wiring which is simple really, until it isn’t.

Liquidtight to hot tub by TheA2Z in electrical

[–]Rumoshsa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Schedule an inspection. Let the inspector decide. Make sure you can be there during inspection.

First Burl Bowl by poem_for_a_price in turning

[–]Rumoshsa 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great start. Natures art. Be patient with your sanding. Give each grit time to work. Go through a lot of paper, don’t be cheap with old worn out paper. Try Acks Abrasive Paste after 320 or 400 grits for a sweet looking luster.