Purpose of shower switch
Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall?
Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. |
Purpose of shower switch
On 10/11/2018 15:33, Steven Watkins wrote:
Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. If I answer this, do you promise to **** off? It's so somebody not in the shower can isolate it quickly before helping the poor bugger who is being electrocuted. |
Purpose of shower switch
On 11/10/2018 10:35 AM, GB wrote:
On 10/11/2018 15:33, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. If I answer this, do you promise to **** off? It's so somebody not in the shower can isolate it quickly before helping the poor bugger who is being electrocuted. I smell JWS has nym shifted again. |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:35:38 -0000, GB wrote:
On 10/11/2018 15:33, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. If I answer this, do you promise to **** off? It's so somebody not in the shower can isolate it quickly before helping the poor bugger who is being electrocuted. And how many times has this ever actually happened? And why are we therefore not forbidden to have showers when nobody else is home? And why can't they make showers which are guaranteed not to electrocute you? And why can't the other person just switch the shower off on its own switch? |
Purpose of shower switch
?
I don't trust the contact gap on a microswitch. |
Purpose of shower switch
On 10/11/2018 15:44, Frank wrote:
On 11/10/2018 10:35 AM, GB wrote: On 10/11/2018 15:33, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. If I answer this, do you promise to **** off? It's so somebody not in the shower can isolate it quickly before helping the poor bugger who is being electrocuted. I smell JWS has nym shifted again. Indeed, he has. And, as you can see from the post he made at the same time as you, answering one inane question just gives him scope to ask a lot of even sillier ones. |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:44:38 -0000, Frank "frank wrote:
On 11/10/2018 10:35 AM, GB wrote: On 10/11/2018 15:33, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. If I answer this, do you promise to **** off? It's so somebody not in the shower can isolate it quickly before helping the poor bugger who is being electrocuted. I smell JWS has nym shifted again. It is a sensible question, do you not know the answer? |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:46:34 -0000, DerbyBorn wrote:
? I don't trust the contact gap on a microswitch. Trust it to do what? When it's switched off, you're not in the shower. When you're working inside the shower, you've turned it off in the fusebox. |
Purpose of shower switch
GB wrote:
On 10/11/2018 15:33, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. If I answer this, do you promise to **** off? It's so somebody not in the shower can isolate it quickly before helping the poor bugger who is being electrocuted. You have just fed a very well known troll. |
Purpose of shower switch
On Saturday, November 10, 2018 at 10:33:19 AM UTC-5, Steven Watkins wrote:
Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Why would anyone have a shower activated with a switch? I've lived in many places, traveled to many countries. Some showers have lights that are on switches, but not the shower itself. The only place I saw such a shower was on my boat and it's a 12V pump. Trolling? |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:49:06 -0000, GB wrote:
On 10/11/2018 15:44, Frank wrote: On 11/10/2018 10:35 AM, GB wrote: On 10/11/2018 15:33, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. If I answer this, do you promise to **** off? It's so somebody not in the shower can isolate it quickly before helping the poor bugger who is being electrocuted. I smell JWS has nym shifted again. Indeed, he has. And, as you can see from the post he made at the same time as you, answering one inane question just gives him scope to ask a lot of even sillier ones. No, I just want the answer to my original question. If the answer isn't sensible, I'll respond in a discussion. Welcome to newsgroups, you'll get used to the idea one day. |
Purpose of shower switch
On 11/10/2018 10:52 AM, Steven Watkins wrote:
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:44:38 -0000, Frank "frank wrote: On 11/10/2018 10:35 AM, GB wrote: On 10/11/2018 15:33, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. If I answer this, do you promise to **** off? It's so somebody not in the shower can isolate it quickly before helping the poor bugger who is being electrocuted. I smell JWS has nym shifted again. It is a sensible question, do you not know the answer? Interesting to you, but stupid to ng. |
Purpose of shower switch
On Saturday, November 10, 2018 at 10:33:19 AM UTC-5, Steven Watkins wrote:
Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can you please describe the situation more fully. Does this switch turn off the water, or does it turn off electricity (such as for a light in the shower compartment)? Cindy Hamilton |
Purpose of shower switch
Steven Watkins wrote:
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:44:38 -0000, Frank "frank wrote: On 11/10/2018 10:35 AM, GB wrote: On 10/11/2018 15:33, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. If I answer this, do you promise to **** off? It's so somebody not in the shower can isolate it quickly before helping the poor bugger who is being electrocuted. I smell JWS has nym shifted again. It is a sensible question, do you not know the answer? Go **** yourself Hucker, because you can't a **** anyway else. |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:57:14 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote:
GB wrote: On 10/11/2018 15:33, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. If I answer this, do you promise to **** off? It's so somebody not in the shower can isolate it quickly before helping the poor bugger who is being electrocuted. You have just fed a very well known troll. For god's sake buy a killfile. |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:59:17 -0000, trader_4 wrote:
On Saturday, November 10, 2018 at 10:33:19 AM UTC-5, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Why would anyone have a shower activated with a switch? I've lived in many places, traveled to many countries. Some showers have lights that are on switches, but not the shower itself. The only place I saw such a shower was on my boat and it's a 12V pump. Don't tell me you still use the kind you shove on the bath tap? We have electric showers in the UK now. |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:04:02 -0000, Frank "frank wrote:
On 11/10/2018 10:52 AM, Steven Watkins wrote: On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:44:38 -0000, Frank "frank wrote: On 11/10/2018 10:35 AM, GB wrote: On 10/11/2018 15:33, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. If I answer this, do you promise to **** off? It's so somebody not in the shower can isolate it quickly before helping the poor bugger who is being electrocuted. I smell JWS has nym shifted again. It is a sensible question, do you not know the answer? Interesting to you, but stupid to ng. Only if you're a bunch of dimwitted electricians that just follow the regulations without understanding them. |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:06:52 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote:
Steven Watkins wrote: On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:44:38 -0000, Frank "frank wrote: On 11/10/2018 10:35 AM, GB wrote: On 10/11/2018 15:33, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. If I answer this, do you promise to **** off? It's so somebody not in the shower can isolate it quickly before helping the poor bugger who is being electrocuted. I smell JWS has nym shifted again. It is a sensible question, do you not know the answer? Go **** yourself Hucker, because you can't a **** anyway else. I was asking someone with intelligence, not somebody who drove taxis and hung extinguishers on walls. |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:05:22 -0000, wrote:
On Saturday, November 10, 2018 at 10:33:19 AM UTC-5, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can you please describe the situation more fully. Does this switch turn off the water, or does it turn off electricity (such as for a light in the shower compartment)? Commonplace in the UK. Circuit from fusebox feeds switch on bathroom ceiling or in the hall. This feeds the 8kW (ish) electrically heated shower. The switch disconnects the heater in the shower (pointlessly as the shower has it's own controls). It would be like turning off your microwave oven at the wall every time you'd finished cooking. |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:33:18 -0000, "Steven Watkins"
wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. What is "electric" in the shower in the first place? |
Purpose of shower switch
On 10/11/2018 15:49, GB wrote:
On 10/11/2018 15:44, Frank wrote: On 11/10/2018 10:35 AM, GB wrote: snip I smell JWS has nym shifted again. Indeed, he has. And, as you can see from the post he made at the same time as you, answering one inane question just gives him scope to ask a lot of even sillier ones. Well, as you were first to bite... |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:19:15 -0000, wrote:
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:33:18 -0000, "Steven Watkins" wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. What is "electric" in the shower in the first place? The heating element, and in low water pressure areas, possibly a pump. |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:19:40 -0000, Richard wrote:
On 10/11/2018 15:49, GB wrote: On 10/11/2018 15:44, Frank wrote: On 11/10/2018 10:35 AM, GB wrote: snip I smell JWS has nym shifted again. Indeed, he has. And, as you can see from the post he made at the same time as you, answering one inane question just gives him scope to ask a lot of even sillier ones. Well, as you were first to bite... The only stupid people here are those that can't killfile. Instead they like to moan and groan. |
Purpose of shower switch
Steven Watkins wrote:
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:06:52 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Steven Watkins wrote: On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:44:38 -0000, Frank "frank wrote: On 11/10/2018 10:35 AM, GB wrote: On 10/11/2018 15:33, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. If I answer this, do you promise to **** off? It's so somebody not in the shower can isolate it quickly before helping the poor bugger who is being electrocuted. I smell JWS has nym shifted again. It is a sensible question, do you not know the answer? Go **** yourself Hucker, because you can't a **** anyway else. I was asking someone with intelligence, not somebody who drove taxis and hung extinguishers on walls. I've got more money than you, and that is all that counts. So, go **** yourself Hucker |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:34:41 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote:
Steven Watkins wrote: On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:06:52 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Steven Watkins wrote: On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:44:38 -0000, Frank "frank wrote: On 11/10/2018 10:35 AM, GB wrote: On 10/11/2018 15:33, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. If I answer this, do you promise to **** off? It's so somebody not in the shower can isolate it quickly before helping the poor bugger who is being electrocuted. I smell JWS has nym shifted again. It is a sensible question, do you not know the answer? Go **** yourself Hucker, because you can't a **** anyway else. I was asking someone with intelligence, not somebody who drove taxis and hung extinguishers on walls. I've got more money than you, and that is all that counts. So, go **** yourself Hucker So someone who stole £10 million from a bank fraud would be better than you in your books. Or some loudmouthed chav who won £20 million on the lottery? |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:26:12 -0000, "Steven Watkins"
wrote: On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:19:15 -0000, wrote: On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:33:18 -0000, "Steven Watkins" wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. What is "electric" in the shower in the first place? The heating element, and in low water pressure areas, possibly a pump. Strange. We just have central water heaters and pressurized plumbing. The water heater is required to be bonded and there is enough metal surface area to bond the water. No switching devices or receptacles are allowed in the shower space and any lights are required to be 8 feet up with a water resistant "shower trim". |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:52:04 -0000, wrote:
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:26:12 -0000, "Steven Watkins" wrote: On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:19:15 -0000, wrote: On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:33:18 -0000, "Steven Watkins" wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. What is "electric" in the shower in the first place? The heating element, and in low water pressure areas, possibly a pump. Strange. We just have central water heaters and pressurized plumbing. The water heater is required to be bonded and there is enough metal surface area to bond the water. We tend to have gas powered boilers that heat the water for sinks and the radiators. But for some reason not the shower - no idea why as they're a similar power rating. No switching devices or receptacles are allowed in the shower space and any lights are required to be 8 feet up with a water resistant "shower trim". When was the last time a policeman inspected this? |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:56:31 -0000, wrote:
On Saturday, 10 November 2018 15:33:18 UTC, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? The switch in the hall is so you can enforce electricity consumption limits with teenagers. Or laugh when you make a woman scream because the water goes chilly. But there's a switch or fuse in the fusebox you can use for both of those things. |
Purpose of shower switch
On 11/10/18 11:12 AM, Steven Watkins wrote:
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:05:22 -0000, wrote: On Saturday, November 10, 2018 at 10:33:19 AM UTC-5, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can you please describe the situation more fully.* Does this switch turn off the water, or does it turn off electricity (such as for a light in the shower compartment)? Commonplace in the UK.* Circuit from fusebox feeds switch on bathroom ceiling or in the hall.* This feeds the 8kW (ish) electrically heated shower.* The switch disconnects the heater in the shower (pointlessly as the shower has it's own controls).* It would be like turning off your microwave oven at the wall every time you'd finished cooking. What we in the US have to understand is the British seem to put a switch on everything. My son lives in London, and in his flat (aka apartment) even the regular wall outlets each have a switch, right in the same housing. Also most water heaters are electric, and are the on-demand type, located in the bathroom (aka "the loo") |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 17:04:58 -0000, wrote:
On 11/10/18 11:12 AM, Steven Watkins wrote: On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:05:22 -0000, wrote: On Saturday, November 10, 2018 at 10:33:19 AM UTC-5, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can you please describe the situation more fully. Does this switch turn off the water, or does it turn off electricity (such as for a light in the shower compartment)? Commonplace in the UK. Circuit from fusebox feeds switch on bathroom ceiling or in the hall. This feeds the 8kW (ish) electrically heated shower. The switch disconnects the heater in the shower (pointlessly as the shower has it's own controls). It would be like turning off your microwave oven at the wall every time you'd finished cooking. What we in the US have to understand is the British seem to put a switch on everything. My son lives in London, and in his flat (aka apartment) even the regular wall outlets each have a switch, right in the same housing. Those are for convenience. I can switch something off without having to unplug it. And before you say "use the switch on the device" there might not be one, or the device might be out of reach or further away. Also most water heaters are electric, and are the on-demand type, located in the bathroom (aka "the loo") Only for the shower. The taps are heated by the central boiler which also heats the radiators. |
Purpose of shower switch
On 10/11/2018 17:03, Steven Watkins wrote:
Or laugh when you make a woman scream because the water goes chilly. Have you ever wondered why you have soooo little success with the ladies? |
Purpose of shower switch
On 11/10/2018 12:02 PM, Steven Watkins wrote:
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:52:04 -0000, wrote: No switching devices or receptacles are allowed in the shower space and any lights are required to be 8 feet up with a water resistant "shower trim". When was the last time a policeman inspected this? The police don't inspect receptacles, that's usually the medical examiner's job. |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 17:41:51 -0000, GB wrote:
On 10/11/2018 17:03, Steven Watkins wrote: Or laugh when you make a woman scream because the water goes chilly. Have you ever wondered why you have soooo little success with the ladies? Why would I want a lady who's afraid of cold water? These kind are much more fun: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...-Epiphany.html |
Troll-feeding Senile Yankietard Alert!
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 07:59:17 -0800 (PST), tardo_4, the notorious
troll-feeding, senile Yankietard, driveled again: Trolling? Seriously, tardo_4? BG |
Purpose of shower switch
Steven Watkins wrote
Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Because that's how your stupid regulatory authoritys decided it must be done. Can't be for safety Fraid so. - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Its done like that for the other situation, so you don't get out of the shower dripping wet and use the switch dripping wet and get a shock that way. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Correct. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. But that's one that can be safely used dripping wet. |
Purpose of shower switch
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 17:49:08 -0000, Dr Mallard wrote:
On 11/10/2018 12:02 PM, Steven Watkins wrote: On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 16:52:04 -0000, wrote: No switching devices or receptacles are allowed in the shower space and any lights are required to be 8 feet up with a water resistant "shower trim". When was the last time a policeman inspected this? The police don't inspect receptacles, that's usually the medical examiner's job. That is NOT a receptacle! It's an exit passage only! |
Troll-feeding Senile YANKIETARD Alert!
|
Troll-feeding Senile IDIOT Alert!
On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:46:34 GMT, DerbyBorn, another braindamaged,
troll-feeding, senile idiot, blathered: I don't trust the contact gap on a microswitch. Trust those that keep telling you that you are feeding a troll, troll-feeding moron! |
Purpose of shower switch
"Steven Watkins" wrote in message ... On Sat, 10 Nov 2018 15:35:38 -0000, GB wrote: On 10/11/2018 15:33, Steven Watkins wrote: Why do houses have a switch to turn the shower off, either a cord on the ceiling or a switch in the hall? Can't be for safety - if you're in the shower and get a shock, if you've managed to get out to reach the switch, you've got away from it anyway. Can't be to isolate to work on it, there's a fusebox for that. Don't need to turn it off when you're finished showering, there's a switch on the shower itself. If I answer this, do you promise to **** off? It's so somebody not in the shower can isolate it quickly before helping the poor bugger who is being electrocuted. And how many times has this ever actually happened? Irrelevant. And why are we therefore not forbidden to have showers when nobody else is home? Because that's not practical. And why can't they make showers which are guaranteed not to electrocute you? They do. And why can't the other person just switch the shower off on its own switch? Because, if the person in the shower has just got electrocuted, they would be too, stupid. |
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