We are taught differently
Do not LIFT your feet off the pavement, and shimmy
That makes sense - although I think the word you're looking for is "shuffle". Not the time or place for dance practice!
We are taught differently
Do not LIFT your feet off the pavement, and shimmy
On a related topic, I always make sure all of the pipes and ducts in my house are grounded. People see metal and assume it's grounded. Assumptions can kill you. The old trick of grounding something new to a cold water pipe in the bathroom may no longer work. Many, many houses today are plumbed with PVC and/or PEX, neither of which can act as grounds.
Funny complacency story
I say “complacency” because all of us get adapted to our field of work, and sometimes trust things too much, and dont properly test. I work much higher voltages and ALWAYS test, so low voltage Im like “meh” ….and it bit me good
I had to demo, and redo our laundry room a few years ago. I have a 240VAC outlet on the floor. So I turned the breaker off, assuming the labeling was correct.
So I got all the old tile out, and backer boards, installed new Hardee backer boards, laid the new 12x24 tiles, and began grouting it. Now mind you, the dryer NEMA outlet is on the floor, with the plastic cover off. As I began grouting, you have to wet sponge it with 2 different sponges. A dirty sponge and a clean sponge
Welp, first time that wet sponge made contact with the metal casing of that NEMA outlet WHAAAAAZZZAAAAAH WHOA BOY….i got the full 240volts and I yelled pretty damn loud enough to make my wife come see if I was ok.
Needless to say ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS check dead before operating near a circuit. My complacency and trust in proper labeling (it wasnt) bit my ass good
Funny complacency story
I say “complacency” because all of us get adapted to our field of work, and sometimes trust things too much, and dont properly test. I work much higher voltages and ALWAYS test, so low voltage Im like “meh” ….and it bit me good
I had to demo, and redo our laundry room a few years ago. I have a 240VAC outlet on the floor. So I turned the breaker off, assuming the labeling was correct.
So I got all the old tile out, and backer boards, installed new Hardee backer boards, laid the new 12x24 tiles, and began grouting it. Now mind you, the dryer NEMA outlet is on the floor, with the plastic cover off. As I began grouting, you have to wet sponge it with 2 different sponges. A dirty sponge and a clean sponge
Welp, first time that wet sponge made contact with the metal casing of that NEMA outlet WHAAAAAZZZAAAAAH WHOA BOY….i got the full 240volts and I yelled pretty damn loud enough to make my wife come see if I was ok.
Needless to say ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS check dead before operating near a circuit. My complacency and trust in proper labeling (it wasnt) bit my ass good
CorrectYep, working for a major utility in California for 35+ years, it was a requirement to check for the dead circuit using live-dead-live test, and lockout-tag out, MANDATORY and documented! When I was working in a critical facility, the amount of work that had to be done planning and documenting step by step procedures, took way more time than actually doing the physical work.
Yeah I do all 120VAC in my house live,you're 100% right. Most of my work is in control circuits that are almost always 24VAC or 30VDC, and when I'm in the field it's doing retrofits on live installations with basically zero downtime expected. I don't bother shutting off power except to avoid damaging something.
Correct
When you say “critical facility” first thought that comes to mind is a Nuke plant. Yes?? I do the field side, all substations, and switchgear using LOTO, and we work off switching routines to create ZOPs that go thru multiple level checks……and still they come out wrong Im the last line of defense to ensure the ZOP is correct when I takeout/restore. So we have a similar background
Yeah I do all 120VAC in my house live,
Ive ate enough of that it just tickles.
However I do NOT recommend that to anyone.
We just lost a Jr lineman to a triplex it bit him below the gauntlets / gloves and he died on the line
I have a buddy that ran a maintenance crew at a paper mill almost get killed by an arc flash incident. They were closing a breaker after doing PM's on a machine. Turns out one of the blades inside the breaker had fallen out and landed across two phases on the load side, PLUS the remote actuator they were using failed to actuate. The rest of the crew went to get another actuator and he was standing in his arc flash suit but his hood off, when the actuator suddenly closed the breaker and in an instant he found himself on the ground outside the room he had been standing in and without the hair on one side of his head. It continued to dump sparks and molten metal until someone else found the next interrupt upstream to shut it down, and it pulled so much current the power company actually called to see what happened.
He came back to work with a newfound passion for safety and ended up getting promoted out of maintenance and put in charge of safety for the entire mill. They ended up doing millions in renovations over the next couple of years to get the incident energy below a new target threshold.
Electricity is wild, you guys.
Distribution load dispatchers and Bulk Power dispatchers are in dfferent buildings in different cities for usTransmission and Distribution Control Center. Operators control the electric transmission and distribution for the grid. Same building
Correct
When you say “critical facility” first thought that comes to mind is a Nuke plant. Yes?? I do the field side, all substations, and switchgear using LOTO, and we work off switching routines to create ZOPs that go thru multiple level checks……and still they come out wrong Im the last line of defense to ensure the ZOP is correct when I takeout/restore. So we have a similar background
Yeah I do all 120VAC in my house live,
Ive ate enough of that it just tickles.
However now Im smart enough to use some gloves, and training my son so….gotta set a good example
However I do NOT recommend that to anyone else
Do it dead (and check dead) whenever feasible
I have a buddy that ran a maintenance crew at a paper mill almost get killed by an arc flash incident. They were closing a breaker after doing PM's on a machine. Turns out one of the blades inside the breaker had fallen out and landed across two phases on the load side, PLUS the remote actuator they were using failed to actuate. The rest of the crew went to get another actuator and he was standing in his arc flash suit but his hood off, when the actuator suddenly closed the breaker and in an instant he found himself on the ground outside the room he had been standing in and without the hair on one side of his head. It continued to dump sparks and molten metal until someone else found the next interrupt upstream to shut it down, and it pulled so much current the power company actually called to see what happened.
He came back to work with a newfound passion for safety and ended up getting promoted out of maintenance and put in charge of safety for the entire mill. They ended up doing millions in renovations over the next couple of years to get the incident energy below a new target threshold.
Electricity is wild, you guys.
@Rich1961 has given you the best advice both in post #5 and post #14. Testing with a meter is only as good as the meter operator and the available ground. The non-contact tester shown in post #5 is the best one available. Make sure to get the 90-1,000 volt one, not the low voltage HVAC one. Use it to check metal parts when you are in any area that makes you grounded. You can also check metal parts by using the back of your hand, you don't grab onto them because your muscles will contract and you won't be able to let go.
Armored cable is especially dangerous, it can lay there with the outer sheath energized for decades waiting for an unsuspecting worker to get between it and ground, BTDT, always check.
BTW the non-contact tester will give false positives on anything that is not grounded and in this case use caution around those items and perform additional testing with a meter and a known good ground, not earth! A solid connection to the main grounding system which is connected to the grounded/common/neutral conductor whatever you choose to call it. You can bring in a good known ground by using an extension cord plugged into a grounded non-GFCI outlet, you can also use the neutral for ground for testing when there is no grounding conductor available. Make sure to test your known good ground before and after the test as Rich1961 explained in post #14.
I use the NC tester to see if 3 wire outlets in old houses are really grounded, if they are not it will start singing 6" away from the wall plate. Same with light fixtures.
This is a good reason why metal parts should be bonded to the main grounding system. The furnace should be bonded which should bond the duct which should trip a breaker if hot wires come into contact, but with poor contact surfaces this doesn't always happen.
What voltage was the breaker??
Hes lucky
People dont realize it, but the bigger the voltages the bigger the BOOM. I tell people I work on bombs, because they are. Taking them OUT of service isnt as dangerous as putting them BACK into service if something is amiss. You never wanna close a high or medium voltage breaker standing near it
When a distribution or transmission level breaker blow up, they can launch or detonate and sling nasty BIG chunks or throw 1000lb+ breakers out of the cubicles or into the air
Power transformers also are extremely dangerous if they blow. Pretty much anything in a substation is
What voltage was the breaker??
Hes lucky
People dont realize it, but the bigger the voltages the bigger the BOOM. I tell people I work on bombs, because they are. Taking them OUT of service isnt as dangerous as putting them BACK into service if something is amiss. You never wanna close a high or medium voltage breaker standing near it. We defer all closing to the dispatchers , but if telemetry it down, we gotta do it local
When a distribution or transmission level breaker blow up, they can launch or detonate and sling nasty BIG chunks or throw 1000lb+ breakers out of the cubicles or into the air
Power transformers also are extremely dangerous if they blow. Pretty much anything in a substation is