Extension Cord Repair Problem
I was repairing an extension cord tonight and I think I made a mistake.
I had to replace both ends because the cord was cut near the plug and the receptacle was cracked. Unfortunately, I neglected to mark which end was which before I cut off the ends. I took a guess and put the plug on the left end and the receptacle on the right. When I tested it, it seemed to take a long time for the electricity to travel the length of the cord, so I'm assuming I put the plug and socket on the wrong ends. Will the electrons in the wire eventually turn around so the electricity flows faster or should I reverse the ends before using it? Thanks! |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
I was repairing an extension cord tonight and I think I made a
mistake. I had to replace both ends because the cord was cut near the plug and the receptacle was cracked. Unfortunately, I neglected to mark which end was which before I cut off the ends. Geez, just go to Big Lots and get them off the shelf. DIY has its limits. |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
DerbyDad03 wrote:
I was repairing an extension cord tonight and I think I made a mistake. I had to replace both ends because the cord was cut near the plug and the receptacle was cracked. Unfortunately, I neglected to mark which end was which before I cut off the ends. I took a guess and put the plug on the left end and the receptacle on the right. When I tested it, it seemed to take a long time for the electricity to travel the length of the cord, so I'm assuming I put the plug and socket on the wrong ends. Will the electrons in the wire eventually turn around so the electricity flows faster or should I reverse the ends before using it? Thanks! You have to match the color of the electrons to the color of the wire. If you force white electrons into the black wire they have to migrate across to the white wire and vice versa. Whatever you do, never try to force black electrons into the green wire, they'll become horribly ill and there will be a violent reaction. The friction caused by forcing black and white electrons together is bad enough but forcing the black electrons into the green wire will lead to an explosive situation. TDD |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
In article , DerbyDad03
wrote: I was repairing an extension cord tonight and I think I made a mistake. I had to replace both ends because the cord was cut near the plug and the receptacle was cracked. Unfortunately, I neglected to mark which end was which before I cut off the ends. I took a guess and put the plug on the left end and the receptacle on the right. When I tested it, it seemed to take a long time for the electricity to travel the length of the cord, so I'm assuming I put the plug and socket on the wrong ends. Will the electrons in the wire eventually turn around so the electricity flows faster or should I reverse the ends before using it? Thanks! Your extension cord is now useless, but you've learned a valuable lesson. It really doesn't matter which end is which, but you can't cut both ends off at the same time. If you do that, *all* the electrons escape from the wires. That's about 750 trillion electrons per millimeter. For a fifty-foot extension cord, it would take about 25 years to refill the wire before you could expect a reasonable flow of electricity. Sure, for now, you'll get enough of a trickle through there to fire up a 4 watt nightlight, but that's about it. |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
In article , DerbyDad03
wrote: I was repairing an extension cord tonight and I think I made a mistake. I had to replace both ends because the cord was cut near the plug and the receptacle was cracked. Unfortunately, I neglected to mark which end was which before I cut off the ends. I took a guess and put the plug on the left end and the receptacle on the right. When I tested it, it seemed to take a long time for the electricity to travel the length of the cord, so I'm assuming I put the plug and socket on the wrong ends. Will the electrons in the wire eventually turn around so the electricity flows faster or should I reverse the ends before using it? Thanks! PLONK... Erik |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
On Jul 13, 10:50*pm, DerbyDad03 wrote:
I was repairing an extension cord tonight and I think I made a mistake. I had to replace both ends because the cord was cut near the plug and the receptacle was cracked. Unfortunately, I neglected to mark which end was which before I cut off the ends. I took a guess and put the plug on the left end and the receptacle on the right. When I tested it, it seemed to take a long time for the electricity to travel the length of the cord, so I'm assuming I put the plug and socket on the wrong ends. Will the electrons in the wire eventually turn around so the electricity flows faster or should I reverse the ends before using it? Thanks! You must be using this on DC current...it's used to going in the opposite direction! bob_v |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
Erik wrote:
In article , DerbyDad03 wrote: I was repairing an extension cord tonight and I think I made a mistake. I had to replace both ends because the cord was cut near the plug and the receptacle was cracked. Unfortunately, I neglected to mark which end was which before I cut off the ends. I took a guess and put the plug on the left end and the receptacle on the right. When I tested it, it seemed to take a long time for the electricity to travel the length of the cord, so I'm assuming I put the plug and socket on the wrong ends. Will the electrons in the wire eventually turn around so the electricity flows faster or should I reverse the ends before using it? Thanks! PLONK... Erik Uhh Erik Maybe you should lighten up just a little. Or buy some brains. The piece was obvious humor and has already generated some fun responses. Lou |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
The Daring Dufas wrote:
DerbyDad03 wrote: I was repairing an extension cord tonight and I think I made a mistake. I had to replace both ends because the cord was cut near the plug and the receptacle was cracked. Unfortunately, I neglected to mark which end was which before I cut off the ends. I took a guess and put the plug on the left end and the receptacle on the right. When I tested it, it seemed to take a long time for the electricity to travel the length of the cord, so I'm assuming I put the plug and socket on the wrong ends. Will the electrons in the wire eventually turn around so the electricity flows faster or should I reverse the ends before using it? Thanks! You have to match the color of the electrons to the color of the wire. If you force white electrons into the black wire they have to migrate across to the white wire and vice versa. Whatever you do, never try to force black electrons into the green wire, they'll become horribly ill and there will be a violent reaction. The friction caused by forcing black and white electrons together is bad enough but forcing the black electrons into the green wire will lead to an explosive situation. TDD Excellent response to a very perplexing problem:-)) Lou |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
The problem is that you were holding the tester higher than
the electrical socket. It takes so, so much longer for the cord to fill with electricity, if it has to flow up hill. Try plugging in the plug end, and then lay on the floor and test the socket end lower than the plug end. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "DerbyDad03" wrote in message ... I was repairing an extension cord tonight and I think I made a mistake. I had to replace both ends because the cord was cut near the plug and the receptacle was cracked. Unfortunately, I neglected to mark which end was which before I cut off the ends. I took a guess and put the plug on the left end and the receptacle on the right. When I tested it, it seemed to take a long time for the electricity to travel the length of the cord, so I'm assuming I put the plug and socket on the wrong ends. Will the electrons in the wire eventually turn around so the electricity flows faster or should I reverse the ends before using it? Thanks! |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
On Mon, 13 Jul 2009 23:50:10 -0400, DerbyDad03
wrote: I was repairing an extension cord tonight and I think I made a mistake. I had to replace both ends because the cord was cut near the plug and the receptacle was cracked. Unfortunately, I neglected to mark which end was which before I cut off the ends. I took a guess and put the plug on the left end and the receptacle on the right. When I tested it, it seemed to take a long time for the electricity to travel the length of the cord, so I'm assuming I put the plug and socket on the wrong ends. Will the electrons in the wire eventually turn around so the electricity flows faster or should I reverse the ends before using it? Thanks! Plug the cord in a south facing receptacle, obviously you are using a north facing receptacle. |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
DerbyDad03 wrote in :
I was repairing an extension cord tonight and I think I made a mistake. I had to replace both ends because the cord was cut near the plug and the receptacle was cracked. Unfortunately, I neglected to mark which end was which before I cut off the ends. I took a guess and put the plug on the left end and the receptacle on the right. When I tested it, it seemed to take a long time for the electricity to travel the length of the cord, so I'm assuming I put the plug and socket on the wrong ends. Will the electrons in the wire eventually turn around so the electricity flows faster or should I reverse the ends before using it? Thanks! Are you above the equator or below it. Makes a difference you know. What you need is a box of Tracer electrons. Based on the concept of tracer bullets. Not available at the Borg. Good electrical supply house is where you need to go. They should come with a pair of those special plastic colored glasses. |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
On Jul 14, 11:32*am, Red Green wrote:
DerbyDad03 wrote : I was repairing an extension cord tonight and I think I made a mistake. I had to replace both ends because the cord was cut near the plug and the receptacle was cracked. Unfortunately, I neglected to mark which end was which before I cut off the ends. I took a guess and put the plug on the left end and the receptacle on the right. When I tested it, it seemed to take a long time for the electricity to travel the length of the cord, so I'm assuming I put the plug and socket on the wrong ends. Will the electrons in the wire eventually turn around so the electricity flows faster or should I reverse the ends before using it? Thanks! Are you above the equator or below it. Makes a difference you know. What you need is a box of Tracer electrons. Based on the concept of tracer bullets. Not available at the Borg. Good electrical supply house is where you need to go. They should come with a pair of those special plastic colored glasses.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - plastic colored glasses What color is plastic? |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Jul 14, 11:32 am, Red Green wrote: DerbyDad03 wrote : I was repairing an extension cord tonight and I think I made a mistake. I had to replace both ends because the cord was cut near the plug and the receptacle was cracked. Unfortunately, I neglected to mark which end was which before I cut off the ends. I took a guess and put the plug on the left end and the receptacle on the right. When I tested it, it seemed to take a long time for the electricity to travel the length of the cord, so I'm assuming I put the plug and socket on the wrong ends. Will the electrons in the wire eventually turn around so the electricity flows faster or should I reverse the ends before using it? Thanks! Are you above the equator or below it. Makes a difference you know. What you need is a box of Tracer electrons. Based on the concept of tracer bullets. Not available at the Borg. Good electrical supply house is where you need to go. They should come with a pair of those special plastic colored glasses.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - plastic colored glasses What color is plastic? Inquiring minds(?) want to know. |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
DerbyDad03 wrote in
: On Jul 14, 11:32*am, Red Green wrote: DerbyDad03 wrote : I was repairing an extension cord tonight and I think I made a mistake. I had to replace both ends because the cord was cut near the plug and the receptacle was cracked. Unfortunately, I neglected to mark which end was which before I cut off the ends. I took a guess and put the plug on the left end and the receptacle on the right. When I tested it, it seemed to take a long time for the electricity to travel the length of the cord, so I'm assuming I put the plug and socket on the wrong ends. Will the electrons in the wire eventually turn around so the electricity flows faster or should I reverse the ends before using it? Thanks! Are you above the equator or below it. Makes a difference you know. What you need is a box of Tracer electrons. Based on the concept of tracer bullets. Not available at the Borg. Good electrical supply house is where you need to go. They should come with a pair of those special plastic colored glasses.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - plastic colored glasses What color is plastic? 42 |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
No, silly. That's the answer to life, the universe, and
everything. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Red Green" wrote in message ... plastic colored glasses What color is plastic? 42 |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
On Tue, 14 Jul 2009 20:46:50 -0400, "Stormin Mormon"
wrote: No, silly. That's the answer to life, the universe, and everything. What do you get when you multiply six by nine? |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
Harry L wrote in
: On Tue, 14 Jul 2009 20:46:50 -0400, "Stormin Mormon" wrote: No, silly. That's the answer to life, the universe, and everything. What do you get when you multiply six by nine? Six what by nine what? Giraffes and hectoliters? Think that results in fortnights per light year. Just an approximation though. |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
A whole bunch of fours running around the house in diapers.
-- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Harry L" wrote in message ... On Tue, 14 Jul 2009 20:46:50 -0400, "Stormin Mormon" wrote: No, silly. That's the answer to life, the universe, and everything. What do you get when you multiply six by nine? |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
Your answer was better.
-- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Red Green" wrote in message ... Harry L wrote in : On Tue, 14 Jul 2009 20:46:50 -0400, "Stormin Mormon" wrote: No, silly. That's the answer to life, the universe, and everything. What do you get when you multiply six by nine? Six what by nine what? Giraffes and hectoliters? Think that results in fortnights per light year. Just an approximation though. |
Extension Cord Repair Problem
On Jul 14, 8:46*pm, "Stormin Mormon"
wrote: No, silly. That's the answer to life, the universe, and everything. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus *www.lds.org . "Red Green" wrote in message ... plastic colored glasses What color is plastic? 42 Excel's Interior.ColorIndex value of 42 is a nasty looking blueish- green. Run this macro: Sub UglyColor() [A1].Interior.ColorIndex = 42 End Sub |
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