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Joined: April 2008 Posts: 1851
Location: Newington, CT | By fillhixx: "But what do I know? I took 8,000 volts once. ( and pissed the warden off by living.....)"
LOL!!! |
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Joined: November 2005 Posts: 4820
Location: Campbell River, British Columbia | ;) the brackets were bs, the volts weren't!
...but it was only a 1/4 amp, so it just burned a lot of hair.
and caused a major personality shift for about 3 months. It's interesting to
really walk in someone elses shoes a while..... |
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Joined: March 2005 Posts: 5563
Location: Blue Ridge Mountains | Playing Barefoot? Give me a break: this is SW Va for goodness sake...anything can and will happen...
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Joined: December 2001 Posts: 7211
Location: The Great Pacific Northwest | I got lit by 800 volts once. Sent me across the room. Working on a Black Cat linear amp and holding a D-104 microphone when the voltage test lead un-clipped from the transformer tang and landed on the chassis. I was working on it at my desk in my bedroom at the time, and the only thing that saved me was when I went over the bed (cleared it completely I was told) it pulled the amp off the desk disconnecting it from the power. Woke up at the doctors office, don't know how long I was out, but it was at least 30 minutes to the doctors house from mine. I guess I was breathing, just not conscious. I was 15. |
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Joined: June 2007 Posts: 3084
Location: Brisbane Australia | On the DVD "Remember That Night" by David Gilmour
he was talking about the dangers of playing on wet stages.
He said what they used to do to check was touch the guitar strings on the microphone.
Apparently one time Roger(Waters) did this and it burned the strings clean off his bass.
AJ |
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Joined: February 2008 Posts: 747
| My recollection is that there were a few guitar players from rock bands electrocuted during 60s or 70s. |
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Joined: May 2008 Posts: 160
Location: Montana | OK, here is the "Straightdope" answer:
http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/2106/is-playing-the-electr...
(BTW, I'm still a newbie, I've searched and searched and can't find out how to make the link say something cool like "straightdope" - help anyone?)
And here is what a "master electrician" says:
http://www.guitarnuts.com/technical/electrical/safety/index.php
I particularly like the advice to "not use your body as a piece of test equipment". I guess you're supposed to use the drummer.
But if you go to wikipedia you'll find a list of the causes of death of rock stars, and guess what cars, drugs, alcohol, planes and heart attacks are far more dangerous ... |
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Joined: December 2008 Posts: 1453
Location: Texas | Originally posted by ScottMt:
(BTW, I'm still a newbie, I've searched and searched and can't find out how to make the link say something cool like "straightdope" - help anyone?)
It's pretty automatic if you are in the "Full Reply Form" Mode. You select the URL button and a window pops up asking for the URL. After inserting the URL, a second pane pops up and says "Now enter the title of the Web page you wish to referenece" - that's where you put whatever title you want to use. Here's an example:
World\'s Best Guitars
If you like typing long cryptic information, you can do the same thing "manually" in the basic reply form, but the simple way is to use the "Full Reply Form" button. Either way, you can "Preview Post" to make sure it looks like you want…
Hope that helps… |
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Joined: October 2005 Posts: 4028
Location: Utah | ScottMt, that second link is very good at explaining the technical side of the issue.
The author suggests carrying a circuit tester to every gig. People, those testers are cheap and they are so easy a Caveman could use one. They look like a big plug. You plug it in and look at the LED display. Red is bad, green is good. |
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Joined: May 2008 Posts: 160
Location: Montana | I also did not realize that GFCI extenstion cords were available. That sounds like a good idea too. |
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