- Location
- Rockland County NY
I dont use them, I live on the edge.
Danger is my....middle name....
I dont use them, I live on the edge.
You only took part of the statement, lmao
If you only took the ending and copied:
........it wouldn't look so bad. Sorry 'bout that. No offense intended. LOL
Russ
Danger is my....middle name....
So you're really wonderdangerballz?
what if your kid/pet/friend/mother sticks their finger in the tank and gets fried...
don't get me wrong. i love my tank, but this just isn't worth it to me. if you are really scared of the gfci tripping while you are at work, you can also run a ups after the gfci so even if it does trip you have a bit of time before everything goes to hell.
Top I'm not 100% sure but I think those are all older sockets. I just realized that the ones in my kitchen and bathroom do not trip during PF's. I believe it is not when the current going to the outlet(from the wall) is disturbed but the actual appliance plugged into it has some kind of failure. As far as PF are concerned.This is a good convo. Russ' issue makes sense too. What if it cuts the electricity and your not there to turn it back on?
+1... Its the amps... Now take it from someone who has been zapped more than a few times 110 to me is like a cup of coffee 220 and 277 hurts big time... and you should probably go to the hospital for those higher volts... But when adding water to the whole situation its a different ball game it is truly dangerous... a gfi or gfci is a must in my book, even if you dont have the outlet you should have a power strip with gfi...IT IS NOT THE VOLTS THAT KILL YOU. IT IS THE AMPS THAT KILL YOU.
Low volts at high amps would kill you quicker than high volts with low amps.(but yes both could kill you)