Re: I’m an idiot!
Mine was a real classic - the mains plug on a radio clock lead needed replacing so I cut the plug off and wired a nice new mains plug onto it. But then it still did not work??? However then I noticed my Variac had the nice new plug on it's now shorter lead - the 2 leads looked identical!! Duh!!!
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Re: I’m an idiot!
Ever made the most beautiful, meticulous job ever of putting a DIN plug or sub-D plug on the end of a cable, only to realise that you should have slid the plug cover onto the cable first?
Me too. |
Re: I’m an idiot!
All too often!
... and it's never quite as neat the second time round. |
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What's that nice bright shiny switch doing in my toolbox...... That's what happens when tea breaks interfere with work...... |
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WORSE !!! It was a 25 way D connector!!!! Joe |
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I did once and ended up having to fit a new non snipped plug. Plugs never forget that they have been snipped even when fossilized. The weed roots will find out well after the appliance is long gone;D |
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I have also learnt to tie a loose knot in the cable before sliding the connector shell on. Otherwise it will generally fall off the other end of the cable and roll/bounce into some dark corner of the workshop. As an aside, if you have a cat never try to make a cable that's about the same length as the height of your workbench. If you do, when wiring one end, the other end will jiggle about near the floor and will become an instant cat toy.... |
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Which reminds me of another story. We used quite a lot of the 50-way connectors. They seemed quite expensive but we always accepted that if we wanted them we had to pay the price. Then one day one of the group noticed that they were much cheaper from another supplier. So he phoned the expensive supplier to complain about being ripped off. The supplier informed him politely that he had been ordering mil spec components and that if he wanted normal spec they could do them much more cheaply as well. Turned out that whoever made the original order had mistakenly ordered mil spec and for years afterwards we had just been repeating the original order. |
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Leaning gradually forwards to inspect the circuitry whilst holding the chassis, my nose came closer to an exposed connection...zap! I sat up straight, smartly!:-] |
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Charge storage was always an issue with high voltage capacitors - they could have been discharged when removed from a system but unless you wired a short across the terminals the embedded charge would creep back to bite you!!!
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Re: I’m an idiot!
Not really an idiot thing to do but I recently bought a seized “John Bull” dial indicator from a steam fair that looked a nice little repair project.
It took less than 5 minutes to dismantle to component parts. Sorting out the damage only a few minutes though reassembly took nearly 2 rather frustrating days as the various parts and springs needed pre tensioning during assembly to actually work. This would have originally been assembled using quite a few jigs and fixtures which I didn’t have!! Eventually after dozens of attempted reassembling tries, I managed to get it back together in a working state!! Christopher Capener |
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I remember when I worked in transformer testing we had some HV transformers which were coated with a special varnish a sort of red color not the normal brown anyhow it turned the HV secondary into little capacitors and I found out the hard way they held a nasty little charge I presume if the AC was tuned off near the crest of the wave it would hold the peak AC volts
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Keith |
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I've certainly done the "lead in amps to measure voltage" on mains, luckily it was in a fused 3 way adaptor and turned in remotely. |
Re: I’m an idiot!
Greetings all.
I have been using this topic as a check list. Yep! Been there. Done that! My own contribution. Working on a HF "brick". A small self contained RF amplifier for increasing the output power of my FT817 low powered transceiver from 5 Watts to about 25 Watts. It was working quite well into a dummy load (maybe I am the dummy) but I needed to clean up a bit of solder. Removed the drive from the FT817 but did not remove the 12 Volt power. OOPS!! Used the soldering iron to make the necessary adjustment not thinking that the tip of the iron is earthed. Exit 2 unobtanium RF power transistors. GRRRRRRR! Fortunately we do live and learn. Cheers, Robert. |
Re: I’m an idiot!
Don't be too embarassed guys, it's not only the EE's - even us poor chemists slip up now and again....
Mine, I spent most of my working life with air & moisture sensitive materials, so was used to vacuum systems, Nitrogen or Argon padding, dried reactants, etc., until one day I was in charge of a new Acrylate modified Polyurethane product, and specifically the production scale-up after R&D. Anyway, I wrote all the relevant production protocols, and sent one of the guys over to Germany for the first developmental production run, thinking no more of it. A day or so later when the first run started, I suddenly had an urgent call from Germany.... "the torque on the reactor agitator's going up... and the circulation pump keeps tripping out... what do we do ?" - Errr... shut it all down, full cooling, etc. etc... and cross your fingers ?! Net result, within minutes, one reactor of solid gelled polymer. Fortunately, it was a development scale reactor, so there was only about 6MT in a 10MT vessel at that point. My mistake - being so used to air sensitive materials, I'd simply forgotten to add an air (Oxygen) feed & purge of the reactor, to stabilise the acrylate. Without it, the reactor contents had gone into free-radical polymerisation, and effectively set solid. In the end, it took 3 contractors several days, working with water-jet cutters & breathing gear inside the reactor, to cut the polymer out. What do they say ? **** happens :shrug: |
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That's a more extreme example, in the 'day job' though!
And for something large and upscaling, I'd have expected an independent check and sign-off of the process before it goes 'live.' So who's the idiot, you for a slip of memory, or the person in charge of the process for new-process implementation? |
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In the past I had to replace the diodes in a SMPS, but failed to remember that these diodes came in stud-anode and stud-cathode variations.
I mistakenly fitted one of each. Which doesn't work at all well in the classic bi phase full wave circuit. Hell, that power supply screamed!!! |
Re: I’m an idiot!
No, that won't work. You can never blame process people. They are always quick to point out that there is no written process for doing so, therefore you can't. Neither is there a written process for writing a written process about it and so on, ad inf.
David |
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