Spyke

The baffled men are meeting now their maker.
Hallelujah, Hallelujah,
Hallelujah, Hallelujah!

33

According to the google, non-venemous snakes are nope ropes. Venemous ones are danger noodles.

10
Pikareply
sh.itjust.works

We call them a Deadman's cable up here, and sadly they're still quite frequently used in the northern rural areas because it costs almost $2,000 to have a dedicated bypass switch installed(generator hookup) so nobody does it, they just throw the Main and hope they don't put too much stress on the internal lines.

Is it legal? Hell no but they do it anyway

24
lemmy.ca

I did this.
Is it stupid? Yes. Did it work? Also yes. For the amount of time that we'd have power out, it was just way to easy to throw a breaker and connect it like this just to keep a small heater and a light running. If I had the money at the time I would have loved battery backup/ bypass but this cost $2 and an old cord.

17

Especially considering that having a functional stove nowadays skyrockets your insurance. A lot of people used to use wood stoves as the backup heat source if the power went out, we still have one ourselves however it's "non-functional" , it probably is to be honest it hasn't been ran for a few years now but it was going to Skyrocket the insurance if we had it listed as a functional Appliance

5

There are way cheaper ways to have a safe interconnect then those second box systems. There are kits that install a plate next to the main breaker and prevent both the main breaker and the next closest breaker from both being on at the same time. You then setup the second breaker to be your generator inlet. Here's a DIY version, but there are kits for all major brands.

3
lemmy.world

I thought this was an anti homosexuality meme until I read the top comment.

I've got to stop using Lemmy. It is changing me...

66
lemm.ee

I too have developed into a very politically correct person with lemmy, I kinda miss being able to make gay jokes

13
lemm.ee

God, straight edge is so old I literally had to get a consultation to understand the insult

12
lemy.lol

Gay men are fucking assholes

Edit: afterthought, it’s a joke I heard, I hope no one thinks this is an offensive statement I made

6
Korne127reply
lemmy.world

Gay jokes as in just jokes making fun of gay people? Why do you miss making that? I can just tell you that especially when I was a gay kid, I would have wished no-one would make such.

-2
Korne127reply
lemmy.world

/shrug at least I'm not an asshole purposely hurting other people

2

I know so many gay and racist jokes as a result of my upbringing. I've only been able to convert a few. There's alao a few I can still tell to the right crowd.

2
lemmy.world

I heard there was a secret cord.
you plug it in to meet the lord.
But you don't really care for safety, do ya?
It goes like this, you plug it in,
And in a flash, the lights go dim,
The power's gone,
and now it’s running through ya.

60
AeonFelisreply
lemmy.world

You have been warned but you needed proof.
You hanged some lighting on the roof.
The spirit of the holiday overthrew you.
You climbed atop the kitchen chair.
You plugged the cord. It zapped your hair.
And from your lips you stuttered Hallelujah.

13
superkretreply
feddit.org

How do you non-sketchily feed a generator's power into your home?

24
SirDerpyreply
lemmy.world

Technical details and the social contract mandate that your generator is never connected to the main power grid. The generator should be wired to an enclosed AC transfer switch. This switch will connect either the generator or the main grid to your home, but never both.

Some detail: If the generator is wired to the main grid it can prevent restoration of main grid power. While an AC transfer switch will perform the task, many jurisdictions mandate additional safety precautions (which can be quite expensive).

31
derangerreply
sh.itjust.works

It can also kill a lineman working on the power lines outside your house, thinking they’re not energized.

23
SirDerpyreply
lemmy.world

It could. But, there's more layers to this swiss cheese model of safety. For example, the lineman's procedure is to ground out, then isolate, then test. They'd need to skip both ground out and test to be electrocuted by an asshole with a generator.

11

Of course, but we should never be advocating for the elimination of Swiss cheese slices. Don’t use the suicide plug, get it wired up correctly with isolation.

7
Empricornreply
feddit.nl

What if the generator was connected after the lineman's test?

2
Pikareply
sh.itjust.works

The proper way of doing it is using what's called a generator bypass switch, basically it's a physical switch that runs before your fuse box, and it makes it impossible to have both the main and the generator being fed at the same time, so you can either have the main on or you could have the generator on. This prevents the electricity from your generator back feeding into the line and killing a line worker trying to restore power.

Sadly, like the other comments have said people tend to use these male to male cables in order to not have to pay the $2,000 to install the switch and instead choose to just turn the main breaker off and plug that cable in. But since it's possible to have both the main and the generator on it's not legal because if you forgot to throw the Main or if you did it incorrectly you could be putting workers at risk

Even disregarding the safety risk of using such a cable, not having a dedicated switch installed also means that you're plugging your generator into usually an outside socket of the house, and those power lines aren't usually meant to have a high load so you risk creating a fire from over straining the line as well

22
Szylerreply
lemmy.world

"risk a fire from staying the line with a high load", wouldn't the fuse in the line you plug it into simply open if you over load it?

3

Well, if you put them right in the normal outlet you bypass breaker and built in fuses, if breaker is open. If it is closed, then it maybe should pop if whole net outside house consumes more current than your house is allowed to (so maybe immediately), but still provides no protection inside. Or maybe if you have individual low-current rated breakers for every outlet, then yes, in this specific scenario it should technically work. Still, you know, generally bad idea.

1

There are electrical panel accessories that automatically isolate the house

18
Revan343reply
lemmy.ca

For the actual physical connection, you use a male receptacle

In order to do it legally, you also need the transfer switch, as has been mentioned.

10

If not, you can borrow them from your aunt

And also illegally expand your 1mx1m apartment with galvanized square steel and eco-friendly wood veneer while you're at it

2

The real way is a generator inlet, which is a male plug that's interlocked with the main. So the cord ends up being a normal male/female cord

9

Modern inverters do this somewhat safely by sensing the phase before outputting power.

Of course, you can’t tell just by looking, so I still would steer clear of the whole thing on principle.

6
grrgylereply
slrpnk.net

Memories. Me and my friends used to zap eachother with these before social media made everyone into cowards

-19

It didn't take the internet for people to be fearful and cautious around high voltage...

20

Nah but we did stop when we took out the neighbourhood's power with our fooling. Just as well since I've since heard it's quite dangerous

-2
lemmy.dbzer0.com

I'm not American, Christmas lights aren't a thing here like they're in the US, can someone explain?

49
lemmy.world

Strand of exterior lights, one end male plug one female. Idiots start to mount the lights with the female end near their outlet. Get done, become confused, go to store for male to male cord to plug into female end.

The female end is for chaining multiple strands, not for supplying power (directly) from the power socket.

88
tylerreply
programming.dev

The power can go through the female end just fine, that’s not the problem. The problem is people plug this “suicide cable” into the wall first, thus creating a 120v taser of sorts. Like someone else in this thread said, the only problem from cables like that is people tend to try to backfeed energy into the system with a generator or solar panels. Boom.

64

Also, at the end of the chain there is a male terminal exposed with live current. Could cause a fire I guess.

42
lemmy.dbzer0.com

So is the problem solved by not plugging it into a powered wall plug? Just like... flick the switch off, like you would a light switch before changing a bulb?

4
sh.itjust.works

Most American outlets aren't switched. They can be but most aren't. If you're really paranoid you can throw the breaker at the panel.

7
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Wait really? I don't think I have a single unswitched plug in my house, and I've never seen another house with even a single unswitched plug. Do US people need to unplug cords to get rid of standby lights?

2

Behold the typical North American duplex power outlet. They typically do not have a built in switch. They might be controlled by a light switch, so you can throw a switch near the door and have the floor lamps turn on but most are always hot.

3

Yes, but if someone trips over the cord there is a 50% chance the wrong side comes unplugged and potentially kills them, hence why they don't make these cords

6

The solution is pulling down your Christmas lights and hanging them back up the right way.

6
BakerBagelreply
midwest.social

You cam cover them with electric tape or put a cover on them. It's nobmore dangerous than your home's exterior outlets though.

5
lemmy.zip

Homes exterior outlets??? It might be europe but we dont have neither of those seemingly pretty dangerous things.

0
lemmy.zip

...in europe. From what i heard america doesnt really have them.

-2
BakerBagelreply
midwest.social

I'm going to assume you are English, since they seem to have extreme fear of electric shocks. But there is never any issue with exterior outlets. 99% of them have covers like this and are no nore dangerous that light switches on a patio or in your bathroom.

2
lemmy.zip

The places where i lived for longer times are hungary, sweden and ireland. Ireland has the same plug as the uk, and in hungary and sweden its the general eu plug. While the plug you linked does seem mostly safe, i think its a good thing that the uk takes electrical safety seriously. My main problem with the female plug is its a christmas tree that can catch on fire and i dont think an exposed wire near it is a good idea. If the cover is required in some way to complete the circuit then i have no problem with it. Thats good design but the sad thing is most of times they skip the good design part.

1

Thr cover doesn't complete the circuit, it just prevents debris getting into the socket. An extension cord doesn't have a cover on the female end and it is completely safe, just like an outlet in a bathroom or a surge protector.

1
starelfsc2reply
sh.itjust.works

Every Christmas light string I have seen has had a small fuse inside of the plug, so even if you managed to get a female plug full of water or something and somehow manage to get shocked before a breaker trips in the outlet, you're probably just going to blow the fuse.

5

Every Christmas light I've ever seen were all low voltage. The last Christmas light that was directly into main power instead of having a power convertor plug was decades ago. I guess that's EU regulations at work.

2
sh.itjust.works

A strand of christmas lights resembles an extension cord, but they tend to be made of smaller gauge wire and obviously have little sockets for tiny light bulbs spaced along them. They typically have 2-prong male plug on one end, often with a 2-prong female pass through on the back so you could plug more than one strand into the same receptacle, and they usually end in a female plug so they can be daisy chained.

Sometimes, when installing them on a house or something, the person installing them may not pay attention to which direction is which, and end up installing them so that the female-only end is near where they intended to plug them in. So instead of pulling them down, or running a long extension cord, they go to the hardware store looking for a male-to-male plug adapter.

Power plugs and sockets are gendered for a very good reason; the female receptacle keeps the energized contacts protected inside, and the male plug's contacts should only be energized when plugged in and their outer shells protect them. A male-to-male cable when one end is plugged in and the other is free now has exposed mains current just waving around in the open air ready to kill someone. And, on a smaller note with christmas lights, they usually have a fuse built into the plug, and plugging them in backwards bypasses this for at least the first strand, so it's technically 102.7% unsafe to do this.

The other thing a male-to-male adapter or cable is sometimes used for is to attach a portable generator to your home's electrical system by just plugging it into an outlet, especially during a power failure. They do make what are essentially special male receptacles I think mainly for the RV industry for attaching generators like that, most houses won't have these. Plugging it into a normal wall socket will actually work, but 1. you have bypassed the breaker panel, so the breakers no longer provide over-current protection. You could overheat the wires in the walls and burn down the house. 2. there's a possibility that you're feeding electricity to the entire house through the breaker box and even out to the transformer, which means the lines could be energized for linemen working on them. Throwing the main breaker might prevent that? They make switching gear designed for buildings with their own backup generators that can either manually or automatically sever their connection to the grid when on internal power, but again a doofus trying to make one of these cables probably doesn't have one of those.

37

Their lights usually have a plug on one end and a socket on the other. Ppl put them around the exterior of their hoses, then realise they did it the wrong way, and the socket end is near the outlet they wanted to plug them in.

Or they mounted two strands of lights, and where they meet up it’s either 2 plugs or two sockets accidentally.

21
lemmy.world

Practical IQ test with binary result ("pass"/"fail").

30
shalafireply
lemmy.world

My dumbass made one by accident. Plugged it in, walked to the other end, picked it up my saw, "Shit. How did I throw the wrong end out here?" Whatever, we've all strung the extension cord backwards before. Here come the IQ test.

Walked to the other end of the cord, yanked it and threw that end back out into yard, plugged it in. Went back to my saw, "Oh for fuck's sake!"

7
lemmy.world

as someone who has strung a ton of lights the wrong way around on more than one occasion... I can understand the desire for some magic solution that doesnt require undoing and redoing your work..

but fuck, You don't mess around with electricity.

People also make these stupid suicide cables to plug generators into houses during disasters, often backfeeding power into the lines that may be down and can cause serious injury to workers trying to restore power.

25
lemmy.world

FYI, you can just turn off the main breaker of the residence to prevent backfeeding into the power lines.

13
RegalPotooreply
lemmy.world

You can, but if forgetting to flip a switch can result in death, then you need a stronger safety control

8
lemmy.world

Someone incompetent enough to forget to shut off the main shouldn't be operating a generator anyway.

1
RegalPotooreply
lemmy.world

That's not the point. Normal, sensible people make mistakes because they are tired or stressed or got distracted or just plain unlucky, so things have to be designed so that people can make a mistake and it not instantly create a potentially lethal situation

3

Someone who's not competent enough to install a proper transfer switch (or at least hire a professional to do it) shouldn’t be operating a generator.

1

If someone can't make the own cord, what's the chance they know how vital it is to flip the breaker?

5
RegalPotooreply
lemmy.world

Yeah, there is a reason why proper installations require actual transfer switches or at least a manual interlock to prevent both feeds being connected at the same time. I'm also not sure what would happen if your generator was out of phase with the grid when it reenergised, but I'm sure it wouldn't be good

10

If your generator was connected to mains when they came back on it would probably just kill your generator. It is the least robust device in the chain. The next step is blowing up the transformer on the pole which is a spectacular light show. It is also very expensive, and will piss off your entire neighborhood who were just about to get power back and now have to wait for the power company to fix the transformer you blew up by being a dumb ass. Finally it is possible that you would trip out the switch yard which is going to make even more people angry. The biggest risk is you putting power back on the lines that people are working on. That transformer on the pole works both directions. It drops the usual 13.8kV on your local power lines to the 240/120V in your house. It will also turn the 120/240 from your generator into 13.8 on the lines that are being worked on. 13.8 will kill you before you even know you touched it. That is why line workers go through multiple tests before they get near lines they are working on. They will notice there is power on lines that are supposed to be dead. They will find where that power is coming from. They will fine you lots of money. There may be criminal charges.

6
lemmy.world

I've used a suicide cord before in some rare instances. When I was finished I immediately took it apart.

24
scottywhreply
lemmy.world

I used to use one to get power into my popup camper...

5

Fuck if I know... I bought the thing used from a buddy like 12 years ago and that was the cord he'd always used ... Plugs into a regular outlet on the outside of the camper and then the outlets inside have power.

/me shrugs

3

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-4mvK2FW78

Plugging the cord in the same outlet isn't dangerous itself, but the prongs will be live on the end that's not plugged in, I'd suggest not touching them. Where it IS dangerous is when people try to use them with a generator to back feed their panel. Don't do that.

19
lemmynsfw.com

On the one hand, there are legitimate uses for double ended male cords. On the other, absolutely none of those legit uses invovle christmas lights

18
zzxreply
lemmy.world

Okay but can we agree very very few uses besides generator hookup

6
lemmy.world

generator hookup shouldn't be one of those, as shouldn't proper generator transfer switches have plugs designed so you don't need a suicide cable?

1

Yeah for sure, they do make generator sockets, which are a fully shrouded male plug meant to be used with a generator transfer switch.

But still, people do hook up generators this way sometimes. Regardless def not many good uses for a suicide cable

1

My old boss had one, for when power went out, he could back feed from his car to the house. I never touched it.

13
Steakreply
lemmy.ca

Good thing you never touched it. What your boss did is possible and if he really understands what he is doing and is not connected to the grid then he can do it. But for any ordinary homeowner absolutely do not try this. You could burn your house down or even worse kill some poor lineman/electrician working on the problem somewhere else on the grid who isn't expecting the equipment he's working on to go live out of nowhere.

9

Exactly this. It's so insanely selfish and pretty illegal.

That said, 120v backfeed is unlikely to kill and linemen kind of expect and test for residual current because of accidents like this causing falls, but it doesn't mean it's okay, and the chances of hurting someone are still non-zero.

4
lemmy.ca

But doesn't the transformer convert the current back up? So it could be way more than 120v on a line that they're expecting to be shut down. At least that's my understanding of it.

But either way yeah, they probably check for it, but no you shouldn't do it because you there's a possibility that you could kill someone.

2

Wouldn't it come down to wattage rather than straight voltage?

My guess is even if the voltage is ramped back up (which does sound accurate), that voltage would droop quickly if anything tried to draw power from it. Probably still not a fun time for anyone on the lines, but Tesla coils go up to something like 20kV and I got shocked by those back in high school. It fucking hurts (actually, more like extreme discomfort) but isn't fatal.

Not that I'm saying a generator or battery at 20kV is the same thing as a 20kV static discharge, just saying that even extreme voltages can be ok. It's about the amperage, not the voltage. Would a home generator or car battery have the amperage if ramped up to thousands of volts, especially considering the whole point of the ramp up is to reduce the amperage to increase efficiency.

I'd also figure, unless the outage was just one house disconnected from the grid, wouldn't any generator or battery end up powering the whole neighborhood and quickly overloading if it tried to send power back out to the grid?

1

You'd have to be pumping up quite a bit I think to reverse through the residential transformer with just your little generac home unit, but you may be correct if there are no one way circuits or backfeed fuses. Even so, hopefully it wouldn't kill. Home voltage stepped up would lose its amperage and be like an extremely anemic taser potentially.

I'd love to hear from an electrical worker on the topic, but yea, it's the amps that kill more than the volts.

1

Yeah I don't know much about it myself, but I know enough to not do this kind of thing. Just going by what I've heard about it.

1
lemmy.world

I don't really get it. Sure, the exposed prongs would be energized once you plugged one side in, but if you plugged the other side into a second outlet (assuming you didn't cross live/neutral), nothing would happen. (those two outlets were likely tied together anyway)

13
mipadaitureply
lemmy.world

You don't work around dangerous things assuming you'll never make a mistake, you work around dangerous things assuming you'll never make three mistakes at the same time.

You are not immune to making one (or more) mistakes, no matter how careful you think you are.

28
Foofighterreply
discuss.tchncs.de

Well, maybe it's because you may die if you accidentally touched touched the prongs? The purpose of female plugs is among other reasons to prevent accidentally touching them.

19
lemm.ee

I guess the fact that it can kill you easily is not enough to call it a suicide cable lmao

8

Yeah, let's call it a self defence cable instead. Like a corded taser.

5

In addition to the exposed prongs, it also means you are passing current into a circuit of unknown capacity without using a safety breaker. You may also be back feeding into your neighborhood power grid and can kill people in the street/other houses that were not expecting the lines to be energized.

15

The problem really is the super exposed hot prong you now have once you plug one end in

15

50-50 chance whether those two outlets are on the same phase or opposite phases; if it's the latter, congrats, that's a 240V short.

Besides, if there's an outlet at the far end of your string of lights, you don't need this, you just plug it in there

14

Two things: 1: there's a high chance you do cross live and neutral, or even live and live on different phases. 2: using it to plug in a generator to power your house can kill electrical workers who are trying to restore a power outage. (If you fail to open your circuit breaker.)

5

Double live is very bad and the cord becomes a literal short. If you're lucky a breaker will flip or fuse burn out. If you're not so lucky you have a cable thats either going to start a fire burning its insulation off and melting itself, or potentially exploding depending on quality and type of cable.

2

Why would you "need" one of these if you could plug in the other end into a second outlet? The point is that idiots don't plan out their christmas light layout and end up with the wrong end at the outlet. They decide that they would rather drive to the hardware store and buy/build a suicide cable rather then just taking the lights down and rehanging them or running an extension cord to where the male end of the lights are.

1
lemmy.blahaj.zone

So if these are people wiring their Christmas lights wrong, assuming these are led lights, doesn't this "solution" not work bc of the polarity anyway? Or is that only a DC thing with diodes? I only did okay in my physics electricity stuff lol

10
ulternoreply
lemmy.kde.social

For simple stuff such as those lights, polarity is usually not a problem when using AC.

In case of AC (Alternating Current), instead of having a + and - pole, you have a Line and a Neutral terminal.

The Line terminal goes + ... - ... + ... - ... + ... - with time and the Neutral stays at 0.

When connecting to LEDs and such, you have an AC to DC converter, which tends to be fine no matter which pin you put in which hole.


Edit for clarity: I am talking only about the specific appliance in this case, having a 2 pin plug. When doing home wiring, polarity matters a lot.

Anti Commercial-AI license

10

Kinda, it's half the power because the power goes like the temporal average of the current squared, the current oscillates like sine or cosine, and the temporal average of a sine or cosine squared is 1/2.

2
ulternoreply
lemmy.kde.social

Unless the AC is a square wave, in which case stuff becomes different.

0
Omgpwniesreply
lemmy.world

In household wiring polarity does matter, especially if you are assembling plugs. Only one of the three wires is carrying live current (hot), the other two are the neutral return path, and ground which is for safety. If you accidentally switch polarity, you can cross hot to neutral and cause a short circuit.

1

Switching the neutral and hot pins doesn't matter except for appliances with exposed metal tied to the neutral pin, which is pretty much exclusive Edison screw lamps. This is why many plugs (especially those that immediately go to a rectifier) don't bother with polarization.

Swtching hot and ground is a problem

4

My bad. I wasn't clear enough.

I was talking about 2 pin plugs, as shown in the post and how it is usually for those cheap lighting thingies.

0
brianorcareply
lemmy.world

It would still work. But it is VERY dangerous. 1. The far end of the light string will now have exposed metal prongs that are energized at 120v, which can be fatal. 2. If the other end gets plugged into a socket, there is a 50% chance it will be a different circuit on a different phase, which can create a 240v direct short, across a wire that has no properly sized circuit breaker. 3. Using it to plug a generator into your house during a power outage can kill electrical workers trying to fix the outage if you fail to open your circuit breakers.

2

In AC, diodes work half the time, every 1/60 second. The "good" LEDs will have circuitry to fully rectify the AC into DC, drop the voltage properly, and smooth the peaks and valleys, so they will be continuously lit. So the cheap LED Christmas lights might have a slight flicker, and the good ones are steady. (Or get fancy with chasing colors, etc.)

All of that happens inside each of the "bulb" enclosures, or sometimes in a box at one end, so it technically doesn't matter which end they are getting electricity from, since the socket at the far end is still just connected in parallel to the plug at the near end. (Otherwise you wouldn't be able to link them together.)

It's just a really bad dangerous idea to reverse them.

2

They tried calling it a doom cord, but heavy metal band started having electrical problems.

8

Oh I call the cables I use to wire up my controllers "suicide cords" because it's just the hot, neutral, and ground hanging out one end, waiting to touch me...

5
RegalPotooreply
lemmy.world

It's not that it won't work - polarity doesn't quite work like that in AC systems - it's that as soon as you plug in one end, the other end has a pair of exposed metal contacts with mains voltage between them. One mistake, touching the contacts or having them come into something metal (like the ladder you are using to hang the Christmas lights) and someone dies

26

Also, once you plug it in to your strand of lights, the other end of your lights will have a live male plug dangling off it.

7
discuss.tchncs.de

in AC, which is what home electricity uses, the polarity is constantly switching, from + , then - , then + , and so on, 50 or 60 times a second depending on where you live. This means that, unlike batteries, it's symmetrical, and you can just splice the cables and attach two male plugs together and they will work regardless, even if you somehow attach the neutral to live and live to neutral, in fact in many countries you can actually buy just the plug without the cable and then you can assemble it yourself in whatever way you please.

of course tho, this should be done only if you have a decent understanding of electricity, and it should not be attempted by someone who lacks those competences, hence why hardware stores "gatekeep" male to male plugs. If you really need one and are sure you understand how they work, you can probably make one yourself.

9
SirDerpyreply
lemmy.world

(If you) are sure you understand how they work

And

If you really need one

I understand how power systems work. But, I can't come up with a situation where I'd use a male-male AC cord rather than a safer and more reliable alternative. Most relevant is simply cutting off the female termination and reterminating through a breaker to the outlet ($15 and 15 min).

1
lemmy.world

Picture this: It's 8pm in early December. You've been hanging lights on your house since about 10 this morning, and it's long after dark. As you're laying the last section, you realize that you've got two female connectors next to each other. Do you tear it up and do it again, or do you hack a solution together so you can go inside and thaw?

1
SirDerpyreply
lemmy.world

The suburban solution is to create a false dichotomy to rationalize outsourcing a simple electrical issue to Lowes.

The hack solution is to cut two ends and reterminate them.

I'd hack it. To do it well it's 8 crimps, wire loom, and harness tape. So, 10 minutes and $5.

2

and you'd be right. If you are sure about it, and you know how it works, just make it yourself, so that you don't need to put anyone else in danger of getting sued.

The reason hardware stores don't sell them is that people WILL use them in a dangerous way, and they don't want to be held responsible.

3

Makes sense. I'd not sell a hack job. But, for a temporary thing that's mine, sure.

2

I worked at an electrical supply store foe a while. The amount of people trying to make these is really way too damn high. At least once a week.

5
lemmy.world

Tell me you've never used a generator without saying you've never used a generator.

5

Even with a generator, suicide cord is the WRONG way to do it.

Not like that'll stop anyone anyways.

20
lemmy.world

Tell me you've never heard of an Interconnect and put the lives of every power line worker in your area at risk every time there's a blackout without telling me...

4
lemmy.world

Tell me you've never heard of turning off the main breaker before switching to generator power without saying it.

1
fakereply
sh.itjust.works

Are you actually insane? Never EVER backfeed a socket like that. Way more dangerous than the Christmas light loonies.

1

If I ever buy one of these, I'd only ever use it to encase in resin and put on a shelf as a comedic ornament.

4

Christmas lights.

Strings of them have a plug on one side and a receptacle on the other. When hanging the lights, people don't notice if they have someone backwards and end up with a receptacle facing a receptacle. Rather than do the smart thing and turn the lights around, they go to the hardware store for assistance in killing themselves.

Another common one is backup generators.

Someone will turn off the breaker in the service panel, then plug a suicide cord from any receptacle in the circuit, to the output of a portable generator.

I'm sure there's more.

14

I made one of those once by accident. I was talking a long extension cord that had been cut in two and converting it into two smaller cords. I messed up and attached the male to the wrong cable.

4
lemmy.world

We intentionally made suicide cords all the time at my old job lol

3
lemmy.world

I used it to connect a generator to the wall and give me some temporary power in my house when I was renovating. It's only dangerous if you are stupid.

2
ricecakereply
sh.itjust.works

Just because you didn't get hurt doesn't mean it wasn't dangerous.

There's a reason the people who write the fire and electrical codes say that if you need to do something like that, you need to have a properly installed transfer switch.

15
lemmy.world

I mean, driving a car is dangerous, everything has a risk inherent to it but you can minimise it by being prudent.

-6

You turn off the breaker. You plug your generator abomination into a receptacle. Your partner checks the panel -- the breakers are off, it's safe to work with the electrical! They kill themselves.

You could just not be a threat to yourself and people around you.

10

Yes, you minimize risk by being prudent and using reasonable and cost effective safety measures.

In a car, that's things like seatbelts, airbags, and other safety features.

The equivalent for powering your house with a generator is the aforementioned transfer switch.

What you're doing is saying that driving a car without seatbelts or airbags is perfectly safe, you just need to not get in an accident.

Stop powering your house with a generator plugged in via the dumbest possible cable and just install a fucking transfer switch. They're not expensive and it keeps you from needlessly endangering people, or even just having a preposterously dangerous cord laying around.

5

Not smart. You could kill yourself or some poor electrician working the problem outside your house somewhere.

4
Fionareply
discuss.tchncs.de

The backup-generator seems to be the one semi-legit use-case that keeps coming up where few people have been able to present a significantly better alternative.

-1

The safe method for a generator is a transfer switch. With that cable you make your circuit breaker useless and could also send power back out to the street and harm someone working on the problem.

12

There's literally an approved solution to the problem designed explicitly to solve the problem.

Install a transfer switch so you can disconnect utility power, switch to your generator and people can see the situation at the breaker.

If you don't have one, you use something called an "extension cord" to run power to your important devices for the duration of the outage.
If you don't know how to power a few appliances with a generator and some extension cords, you definitely shouldn't be thinking you can use a dangerous cable that people who do know you should never use in the first place.

6