Looks good to me! Full send
I had no idea that I was color blind until joining the Air Force and was shown those circles of dots.![]()
Color blindness - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
Here mostly all kids go preventive medical exam every year. on one examation color blindness is checked.
Some people dont even know that there is an issue. How to tell ? For them its correct colored
Looks like my toilet after indulging in too many burritos at Taco Hell.
That's one way to fuse wires togetherSolar inspection contractor combined 24 micro inverters on a single branch circuit. 15 max per circuit. What could go wrong SMH”That ain’t right”
Solar inspection contractor combined 24 micro inverters on a single branch circuit. 15 max per circuit. What could go wrong SMH”That ain’t right”
I think it's just a fluke
Personally, I think a lot of this shit on Facebook is for likes and views. This idiot knows exactly what they did to get a reading and just looking for attention
I'd bet with you, although it's less than 100%. Over the years I've seen this sort of thing with RVs that tingle. All of the experts jump in with their 100% diagnosis when what's really wrong is that the RV chassis, for some reason, isn't connected to the safety ground. This is one case where the high impedance digital meters lead the clueless to wrong conclusions. (On the other hand, RV makers are pretty notorious for driving screws through romex).My bet it's induced, not a direct connection otherwise you would have gotten A LOT more than a tingle.
Which is EXACTLY why I carried either a Simpson 260 or a Tripplett 630, both analog VOMs, for over 31 years......you learn how to "read" what they tell you, not just what the meter face says, and you wind up with a very accurate analysis......voltage is analog and IMO, nothing reads it better than an analog meter. I love digital stuff but please make my voltage diagnostic equipment analog.This is one case where the high impedance digital meters lead the clueless to wrong conclusions.
I built this circa 1968, and I still keep it around for this very reason.Which is EXACTLY why I carried either a Simpson 260 or a Tripplett 630, both analog VOMs, for over 31 years......you learn how to "read" what they tell you, not just what the meter face says, and you wind up with a very accurate analysis......voltage is analog and IMO, nothing reads it better than an analog meter. I love digital stuff but please make my voltage diagnostic equipment analog.![]()
Vacuum tube, there's a blast from the past. Can't be too portable, yes?
I kept getting a tingle when my forearm touched a slider when getting into the RV. I checked with my Fluke between the slider and concrete pad. It started out about 10 and I decided I would need to look into it later. At 60 volts, it hurt and I decided I should look into it NOW! The ground pin had corroded away and things were finding a way to make it to earth. Namely me! My wife never felt a thing and thought I was imagining things. She never brushed up against the slide getting in. I got a new television out of the ordeal and of course, a new power cable.I'd bet with you, although it's less than 100%. Over the years I've seen this sort of thing with RVs that tingle. All of the experts jump in with their 100% diagnosis when what's really wrong is that the RV chassis, for some reason, isn't connected to the safety ground. This is one case where the high impedance digital meters lead the clueless to wrong conclusions. (On the other hand, RV makers are pretty notorious for driving screws through romex).
Years ago I visited someone whose house was very close a major transmission line. He liked to show visitors that a fluorescent tube would light up dimly when held up while standing on his deck.