Amazon could soon be on the hook for safety of third-party products it sells and ships — Government order could classify it as a distributor, potentially exposing it to more legal claims::undefined

  • Landless2029@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I’ve seen these used in low income homes where the basement electricity is paid by the landlord for coin operated washers. Then someone gets their electricity cut (lack of payment) so they use these cables to jump the outlets and steal electricity from the landlord.

    The dude just went to a hardware store and bought an extension cable and a replacement plug head. Snipped the female end and added the male in like 5 minutes.

    The only practical usage of those things is jumping a generator to a house during a blackout.

    Edit: yes please bring on the down votes for me sharing a story about how the poor use these scary cables. Real nice.

      • Landless2029@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        I think the correct way to jump is to flip your main so you’re disconnected. I’m probably talking out of my ass tho.

        I don’t own a generator nor have the need. Just basing this on what I’ve seen in the wild.

        • theneverfox@pawb.social
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          11 months ago

          The more correct way is to install a switch that does that, so you can be connected to the grid or to the generator, not both. It’s basically what you said, but it doesn’t trust users to remember to do it correctly

            • theneverfox@pawb.social
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              11 months ago

              It does, there’s even automatic ones so you can have the generator kick in after a second or two without power and shut off when the grid comes back up

              I watched a video on it a week or two ago, I think the general term would be an interlock

        • fkn@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Yes, in theory that would work. But they actually make main disconnect switches for this in the event that the main breaker fails. It’s a mandatory install in all grid tie electrical generator systems (including solar).

      • Saik0@lemmy.saik0.com
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        11 months ago

        I keep hearing this as the “Reason” but never backed by anything that makes sense. I’ve never needed to jump my generator to my house, and don’t particularly care to even in the event of “disaster” so don’t attack me like I’m doing this…

        If you successfully suicide jumper your generator to the grid. Wouldn’t the collective load of all your neighbors stuff kill the generator? (eg bog it down to the point that it turns off? [if it has no breaker]) Also wouldn’t the load of literally your whole neighborhood trip off the breaker in the generator(or in the panel)? Doesn’t this leave it as the only “risk” is if you happen to turn on the generator as the lineman themselves are specifically holding a live wire with an active connection to a ground/neutral before the previous stuff can happen? Or only if they happen to isolate you and then you turn on the genny after? Wouldn’t you agree that this last thing would be an incredibly rare?

        And I can never find an article where a cable was determined to be the cause of an electrocution…

        Now because the internet is the internet… I’m not advocating for using suicide cables… There’s much easier reasons why this is a terrible idea (exposed live contacts being literally the primary one). But I just never understood the “lineman” argument with all the stuff that would have to go specifically “right” in order to do that kind of harm to a lineman.

        • ocassionallyaduck@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Look into it more. It’s incredibly common, and the voltage from a small generator in your yard, yes in theory, could leak to neighbors. However electricity follows the shortest path to ground. So if your home is drawing it, you will basically prevent that leakage. If you do fire it up, but use nothing, you may partially leak current to your neighbors (and potentially be liable for damages if your little backyard Honda or generac has a power spike at some point)

          And the danger to to the linemen doing repair isn’t the voltage necessarily (house current of 120v is not remotely high enough amperage to cause instant death. You can stick a fork in an outlet and try it) it is that you may suddenly electrify lines they are working on while suspended. If you charge the line, maybe you shock them and they have an accident. Or worse, your charged line creates enough of a charge differential that during the repair the much higher voltage electricity they have not isolated yet may bridge the air gap because you’ve energized the “dead” side prematurely.

          In reality, most electricians and linemen are careful of this because of this exact reason. But it did harm a few people before moron’s use of these things became common knowledge. Prior to these kinds of cables being commonly marketed for this, a lineman could hop up and reconnect you faster because there was an assumption they had full control of the current pathways. Now that’s a toss up. This isn’t a recent thing either, but it’s becoming more common.

              • Saik0@lemmy.saik0.com
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                11 months ago

                https://up.codes/viewer/puerto_rico/ibc-2018/chapter/27/electrical

                And doesn’t adhere to US electrical code.

                Virtually all latin american countries are third world. Puerto Rico is latin american.

                Their own people say it’s third world. https://www.abc57.com/news/only-on-puerto-rican-businessman-says-home-is-third-world-country

                The US is by definition not a third world country.

                Depends on the definition. Originally used to simply describe the participants of WW2 and the cold war… Since the cold war, it’s definition has more aligned with economics and industrialization rather than simply what side a country was on during a war. It’s clear by my use of the term that I meant the modern definition, especially since we’re talking in 2024… and not in 1989.

                https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/third-world-countries

                The modern definition of Third World

                However, the meaning of Third World changed after the fall of the Soviet Union (and the end of the Cold War) in the early 1990s. “Third World” lost its political root and came to refer to economically poor and non-industrialized countries, as well as newly industrialized countries. Under this modernized definition, Third World countries are those that display economic, social, political, and environmental issues such as high poverty rates, economic instability, and lack of essential human resources compared to the rest of the world.

                This shifting definition has led to significant confusion as to which countries could correctly be called Third World today. For example, going by the historical definition, nations such as Finland, Sweden, Ireland, and Switzerland were not aligned with either NATO or the Communist Bloc, and so were Third World countries. However, all four countries are economically prosperous today, and as such would not be considered Third World under the current modern definition of the term.

                Adding insult to inaccuracy, when used in its modern context, Third World is considered to be a derogatory term that degrades countries which are developing and/or poor. This combination of confusion and disrespect has made Third World a largely obsolete term.

                Under the “new” definition many parts of the USA could be considered third world, but I’m not going to argue that.

                But fine, I’ll modify my statement here…

                Puerto Rico is a third world commonwealth.

                Nobody… and I mean NOBODY has yet to address the actual electrical engineering part of my question. Instead we’ve gone off the political bullshit bandwagon. So I’m just going to take it that I’m correct, and that the original premise is bullshit.

                • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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                  11 months ago

                  Nobody… and I mean NOBODY has yet to address the actual electrical engineering part of my question. Instead we’ve gone off the political bullshit bandwagon. So I’m just going to take it that I’m correct, and that the original premise is bullshit.

                  Reads like:

                  Nobody… and I mean NOBODY (i.e. the fifteen people that have seen my posts on Lemmy) has yet to falsify my claim that I’m the second coming of Jesus. So I’m just going to take it that I’m correct, and you can kiss my holy, demi-god ass.

                  • Saik0@lemmy.saik0.com
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                    11 months ago

                    And the fact that you still keep addressing items not on topic simply shows that you’re a dickwad. What’s your point? I’ve made a reasoned argument. You’ve addressed nothing yourself except make really dumb platitudes.