Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

The AC plug on an older TV is beginning to leak a green liquid from both
prongs. Does anyone know what this could be? Is there any cause for alarm
that this may be the beginning stage of it shorting?


  #2   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 19
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

"WDS" wrote in message
. ..
The AC plug on an older TV is beginning to leak a green liquid from both
prongs. Does anyone know what this could be? Is there any cause for alarm
that this may be the beginning stage of it shorting?



Sacred blood of Mother Mary the Vulcan?


  #3   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,469
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

On 8/30/2008 12:32 PM WDS spake thus:

The AC plug on an older TV is beginning to leak a green liquid from both
prongs. Does anyone know what this could be? Is there any cause for alarm
that this may be the beginning stage of it shorting?


That's the electricity (commonly known as "juice") you got leaking
there, good buddy. You need to get a couple of Johnson gaskets to seal it.


--
"In 1964 Barry Goldwater declared: 'Elect me president, and I
will bomb the cities of Vietnam, defoliate the jungles, herd the
population into concentration camps and turn the country into a
wasteland.' But Lyndon Johnson said: 'No! No! No! Don't you dare do
that. Let ME do it.'"

- Characterization (paraphrased) of the 1964 Goldwater/Johnson
presidential race by Professor Irwin Corey, "The World's Foremost
Authority".
  #4   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,236
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

On Aug 30, 2:32*pm, "WDS" wrote:
The AC plug on an older TV is beginning to leak a green liquid from both
prongs. Does anyone know what this could be? Is there any cause for alarm
that this may be the beginning stage of it shorting?


How do you know it is from the plug and not from something inside the
wall that is leaking down onto the outlet??
  #5   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,207
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

WDS wrote:
The AC plug on an older TV is beginning to leak a green liquid from
both prongs. Does anyone know what this could be? Is there any cause
for alarm that this may be the beginning stage of it shorting?


If there's liquid coming out it's not coming from the plug--something
is either leaking on it from above or leaking into the receptacle from
behind the wall. Either way find out where it's coming from. In
addition to fixing the leak you'll likely need to replace the plug,
the outlet, and possibly some of the wiring.

--
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)




  #6   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,946
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

"WDS" wrote in news:gdhuk.19228$IB6.14120
@bignews8.bellsouth.net:

The AC plug on an older TV is beginning to leak a green liquid from both
prongs. Does anyone know what this could be? Is there any cause for alarm
that this may be the beginning stage of it shorting?



Liquid of any type === Electricity plugs/outlets ---- yea I'd say cause
for alarm. Remove power source until you figure out what it is. Higher
level shock or fire hazard.

I would thing liquid discovered around any household electricity would
cause alarm even to those with no knowledge of electricity.

Green is usually the color of when copper corrodes. So, if there is a
liquid getting on copper, it must be picking up the corrosion before
showing itself.
  #7   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 14,845
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

On Aug 30, 3:32*pm, "WDS" wrote:
-- The AC plug on an older TV is beginning to leak a green liquid from
both
-- prongs. Does anyone know what this could be? Is there any cause for
alarm
-- that this may be the beginning stage of it shorting?

It can't be a short since you only have 2 prongs. If the hot wire were
shorted, it would leak black and if the neutral were shorted, it would
leak white.

A short will only leak green if there is a ground wire. Since you
don't have a ground wire at the plug, it can't be a short to ground.

OK, so what else would make it leak green?

You said it was an older TV. Is it a color TV or B&W?

If it's color, I'll bet the picture is looking a bit reddish these
days since you're losing green out the ass errr, I mean *back* - end.
My guess is that the heat sink for the picture tube has a leaky drain.
Currently, there is little that can be done in this situatio. I would
resist the urge to cap it. That will just a induce a backup.

If it's B&W, and you have a color TV that you watch more often, I'd
say it was green with envy and it's just showing it's true colors. You
better give it some quality time or it'll get so angry you'll be
seeing red. What a mess that will make.



  #8   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,946
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

DerbyDad03 wrote in news:465aeed4-99d0-423a-bfb0-
:

On Aug 30, 3:32*pm, "WDS" wrote:
-- The AC plug on an older TV is beginning to leak a green liquid from
both
-- prongs. Does anyone know what this could be? Is there any cause for
alarm
-- that this may be the beginning stage of it shorting?

It can't be a short since you only have 2 prongs. If the hot wire were
shorted, it would leak black and if the neutral were shorted, it would
leak white.

A short will only leak green if there is a ground wire. Since you
don't have a ground wire at the plug, it can't be a short to ground.

OK, so what else would make it leak green?

You said it was an older TV. Is it a color TV or B&W?

If it's color, I'll bet the picture is looking a bit reddish these
days since you're losing green out the ass errr, I mean *back* - end.
My guess is that the heat sink for the picture tube has a leaky drain.
Currently, there is little that can be done in this situatio. I would
resist the urge to cap it. That will just a induce a backup.

If it's B&W, and you have a color TV that you watch more often, I'd
say it was green with envy and it's just showing it's true colors. You
better give it some quality time or it'll get so angry you'll be
seeing red. What a mess that will make.




Well if I have any TV questions I sure know who to ping on them. You
really know your ****, errrr. mean backsides.
  #9   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,469
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

On 8/30/2008 12:32 PM WDS spake thus:

The AC plug on an older TV is beginning to leak a green liquid from both
prongs. Does anyone know what this could be? Is there any cause for alarm
that this may be the beginning stage of it shorting?


Score for this thread so far: jokester 5, troll-ees 0.


--
Washing one's hands of the conflict between the powerful and the
powerless means to side with the powerful, not to be neutral.

- Paulo Freire
  #10   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

I also thought along that line about copper corrosion being green. There is
nothing wrong with the outlet. The green liquid is definitely coming out of
both prongs on the plug only when current is passing through it. Apparently,
the copper wires in the plug are corroding. This is a 24 year old, 10" color
set that has been sitting in a closet for years. Still has a great picture.

Thanks for being the only poster that doesn't think he is a comedian!

"Red Green" wrote in message
...
"WDS" wrote in news:gdhuk.19228$IB6.14120
@bignews8.bellsouth.net:

The AC plug on an older TV is beginning to leak a green liquid from both
prongs. Does anyone know what this could be? Is there any cause for

alarm
that this may be the beginning stage of it shorting?



Liquid of any type === Electricity plugs/outlets ---- yea I'd say cause
for alarm. Remove power source until you figure out what it is. Higher
level shock or fire hazard.

I would thing liquid discovered around any household electricity would
cause alarm even to those with no knowledge of electricity.

Green is usually the color of when copper corrodes. So, if there is a
liquid getting on copper, it must be picking up the corrosion before
showing itself.





  #11   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 10,530
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

It's a sensor probe from an alternate universe. You need to soak the plug in
a bucket of Clorox bleach, call a priest, and move to New Orleans within the
next 12 hours. Those green plugs will crawl up your nose while you are
sleeping, and take over your brain. The military has people like you at area
51 in New Mexico, which is top secret. Enough to say, it's not pretty.

OTOH, you could wipe it off with a paper towel, and not worry about it.

--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
..


"WDS" wrote in message
. ..
The AC plug on an older TV is beginning to leak a green liquid from both
prongs. Does anyone know what this could be? Is there any cause for alarm
that this may be the beginning stage of it shorting?



  #12   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

replying to Red Green, George Tveden wrote:
If your outlet or wall is stained with a blue goo or "Smurf Juice", and it
seems to be coming from the electrical cord... The cord is rotten. This is a
common problem with older wiring. There is liquid plastic added to the pvc
insulation to turn it from rigid pvc (pipe pvc) into flexible pvc for wiring.
If it's old or badly made it will rot and the liquid plastic oozes out
everywhere. This chemicaly reacts with the copper conductor and forms nasty
green plastic+copper goo. Since this is a cord that will be moved, definately
replace it before it rots away and falls off.

--
for full context, visit http://www.homeownershub.com/mainten...ug-328296-.htm


  #13   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

replying to J. Clarke, George Tveden wrote:
If your wall, outlet or appliance is stained with a blue goo or "Smurf Juice",
and it seems to be coming from the electrical cord... The cord is rotten. This
is a common problem with older wiring. There is liquid plastic added to the
pvc insulation to turn it from rigid pvc (pipe pvc) into flexible pvc for
wiring. If it's old or badly made it will rot and the liquid plastic oozes out
everywhere. This chemicaly reacts with the copper conductor and forms nasty
green plastic+copper goo. Since this is a cord that will be moved, definately
replace it before it rots away and falls off.

--
for full context, visit http://www.homeownershub.com/mainten...ug-328296-.htm


  #14   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

replying to WDS, George Tveden wrote:
If your vintage Bell & Howell projector, TV, or vaccum is stained with a blue
goo or "Smurf Juice", and it seems to be coming from the electrical cord...
The cord is rotten. This is a common problem with older wiring. There is
liquid plastic added to the pvc insulation to turn it from rigid pvc (pipe
pvc) into flexible pvc for wiring. If it's old or badly made it will rot and
the liquid plastic oozes out everywhere. This chemically reacts with the
copper conductor and forms nasty green plastic+copper goo. Since this is a
cord that will be moved, definately replace it before it rots away and falls
off.

--
for full context, visit http://www.homeownershub.com/mainten...ug-328296-.htm


  #15   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 7,157
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

On Sunday, November 20, 2016 at 8:44:05 AM UTC-6, George Tveden wrote:
replying to WDS, George Tveden wrote:
If your vintage Bell & Howell projector, TV, or vaccum is stained with a blue
goo or "Smurf Juice", and it seems to be coming from the electrical cord....
The cord is rotten. This is a common problem with older wiring. There is
liquid plastic added to the pvc insulation to turn it from rigid pvc (pipe
pvc) into flexible pvc for wiring. If it's old or badly made it will rot and
the liquid plastic oozes out everywhere. This chemically reacts with the
copper conductor and forms nasty green plastic+copper goo. Since this is a
cord that will be moved, definately replace it before it rots away and falls
off.
--


You're too late, 8 years ago, the green goo which turned out to be an outerspace alien pestilence, oozed out of the outlet and ate WDS. A special response team from Area 51 showed up when called by local authorities to cleanup the mess. The corralled green goo and what little remained of WDS is in a hazardous storage area at the top secret facility being studied by scientists. WDS is survived by a wife, 4 ex-wives, 47 children and 349 gerbils. The gerbils really miss him. It was a real tragedy. (._.)

[8~{} Uncle Sad Monster


  #16   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 22,192
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

On Sun, 20 Nov 2016 12:40:26 -0800 (PST), Uncle Monster
wrote:

If your vintage Bell & Howell projector, TV, or vaccum is stained with a blue
goo or "Smurf Juice", and it seems to be coming from the electrical cord...
The cord is rotten. This is a common problem with older wiring. There is
liquid plastic added to the pvc insulation to turn it from rigid pvc (pipe
pvc) into flexible pvc for wiring. If it's old or badly made it will rot and
the liquid plastic oozes out everywhere. This chemically reacts with the
copper conductor and forms nasty green plastic+copper goo. Since this is a
cord that will be moved, definately replace it before it rots away and falls
off.
--


You're too late, 8 years ago, the green goo which turned out to be an outerspace alien pestilence, oozed out of the outlet and ate WDS. A special response team from Area 51 showed up when called by local authorities to cleanup the mess. The corralled green goo and what little remained of WDS is in a hazardous storage area at the top secret facility being studied by scientists. WDS is survived by a wife, 4 ex-wives, 47 children and 349 gerbils. The gerbils really miss him. It was a real tragedy. (._.)

[8~{} Uncle Sad Monster


Thanks for the update. All along I thought the building inspector
gigged the guy for using the wrong colored lube to pull the wires.
  #17   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,515
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

Uncle Monster posted for all of us...



On Sunday, November 20, 2016 at 8:44:05 AM UTC-6, George Tveden wrote:
replying to WDS, George Tveden wrote:
If your vintage Bell & Howell projector, TV, or vaccum is stained with a blue
goo or "Smurf Juice", and it seems to be coming from the electrical cord...
The cord is rotten. This is a common problem with older wiring. There is
liquid plastic added to the pvc insulation to turn it from rigid pvc (pipe
pvc) into flexible pvc for wiring. If it's old or badly made it will rot and
the liquid plastic oozes out everywhere. This chemically reacts with the
copper conductor and forms nasty green plastic+copper goo. Since this is a
cord that will be moved, definately replace it before it rots away and falls
off.
--


You're too late, 8 years ago, the green goo which turned out to be an outerspace alien pestilence, oozed out of the outlet and ate WDS. A special response team from Area 51 showed up when called by local authorities to cleanup the mess. The corralled green goo and what little remained of WDS is in a hazardous storage area at the top secret facility being studied by scientists. WDS is survived by a wife, 4 ex-wives, 47 children and 349 gerbils. The

gerbils really miss him. It was a real tragedy. (._.)

[8~{} Uncle Sad Monster


If it's green you GOTTA call Ghostbusters

--
Tekkie
  #18   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1
Default Green liquid from AC electrical plug

replying to J. Clarke, Mozayic wrote:
*Take George Tveden's advice. Blue goo began oozing out around the plug
prongs on an old unused small countertop appliance I had; it had been
completely covered, and there was absolutely no way anything had leaked from
above or into it from a receptacle. Thankfully, I saw it before plugging it,*

--
for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...ug-328296-.htm


Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Unisaw Electrical Plug Greg G. Woodworking 29 October 8th 06 05:14 AM
unstabbing a electrical plug Bud-- Home Repair 0 November 7th 05 04:16 PM
unstabbing a electrical plug RBM Home Repair 3 November 7th 05 03:56 PM
Removing A Really Frozen Oil Fill Plug ? Liquid Wrench, Or... ? Robert11 Home Repair 10 August 24th 05 06:39 PM
Moving An Electrical Plug Michael Roback Home Repair 3 April 5th 04 05:56 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 02:25 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"