Word Link Discussions

Winterknight
Winterknight
Joined: 4 Jun 05
Posts: 1445
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Knurd, said to be the

Knurd, said to be the original 1960's spelling from Georgia tech, as in the description of serious students, in comparison to the drunken frat boys.

Scrooge McDuck
Scrooge McDuck
Joined: 2 May 07
Posts: 1052
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Simpsoncalifragilisticexpiala

Simpsoncalifragilisticexpialad'ohcious is a Simpson's episode (Seas. 8, Ep. 13) coined after Disney's 1964 "Marry Poppins" film.

mikey
mikey
Joined: 22 Jan 05
Posts: 12680
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the word was flat and I added

the word was flat and I added pack because that's what Linux is switching to for it's apps and upgrades, flatpacks

RandyC
RandyC
Joined: 18 Jan 05
Posts: 6603
Credit: 111139797
RAC: 0

Diplomacy -->

Diplomacy --> Ping-pong

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ping-pong_diplomacy

Seti Classic Final Total: 11446 WU.

cecht
cecht
Joined: 7 Mar 18
Posts: 1533
Credit: 2900705556
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Nixon → Tricky President

Nixon → Tricky

President Richard M. Nixon earned the nickname Tricky Dick

Ideas are not fixed, nor should they be; we live in model-dependent reality.

Scrooge McDuck
Scrooge McDuck
Joined: 2 May 07
Posts: 1052
Credit: 17887304
RAC: 11588

Electrical bathroom sockets,

Electrical bathroom sockets, still a serious matter in the UK, which is why there are hardly any in bathrooms anywhere, as some people joke. It's a "special location", i.e. regulation, bureaucracy, rules & standards... https://electrical.theiet.org/bs-7671/building-regulations/part-p-england-and-wales/

In comparision: in Germany we had wet room sockets with a spring-loaded cover in the past. In newly built houses: regular sockets and switches, even near sinks.

mikey
mikey
Joined: 22 Jan 05
Posts: 12680
Credit: 1839084349
RAC: 3912

Scrooge McDuck

Scrooge McDuck wrote:

Electrical bathroom sockets, still a serious matter in the UK, which is why there are hardly any in bathrooms anywhere, as some people joke. It's a "special location", i.e. regulation, bureaucracy, rules & standards... https://electrical.theiet.org/bs-7671/building-regulations/part-p-england-and-wales/

In comparision: in Germany we had wet room sockets with a spring-loaded cover in the past. In newly built houses: regular sockets and switches, even near sinks. 

In all new houses, for a few years now, we've had electrical sockets near sinks in both bathrooms and kitchens but they all have ground fault detectors built-in that turn the power off if a problem occurs. All outside circuits have them as well, but like kitchens and bathroom one ground fault detector can cover more than a few actual outlets and finding where the tripped breaker is can be a pain in the butt!! ie one of mine tripped from the Christmas lights and the rest was outside on the opposite side of the house!!

archae86
archae86
Joined: 6 Dec 05
Posts: 3157
Credit: 7220564931
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mikey wrote: All outside

mikey wrote:

All outside circuits have them as well, but like kitchens and bathroom one ground fault detector can cover more than a few actual outlets and finding where the tripped breaker is can be a pain in the butt!! ie one of mine tripped from the Christmas lights and the rest was outside on the opposite side of the house!!

Yes indeed.  I created a fault while testing a purge pump in a bucket and tripped the GFI serving a socket outside the house.  I had no idea, and thought that a particle detector which got power from the same circuit had failed and bought another.  Of course the next did not work there either and after looking for and failing to find the GFI I gave up and power the particle detector from another socket.  Well over a year later I realized that the GFI on a bathroom socket on the opposite side of the house was tripped (I pretty nearly never plug things in there, so had not noticed).  That turned out to be the offending tripped one, so I have power on that outside socket again.

Some of the wiring in my house is downright whimsical.  There is a kitchen circuit with two GFIs on it.  Puzzling, that one.

mikey
mikey
Joined: 22 Jan 05
Posts: 12680
Credit: 1839084349
RAC: 3912

archae86 wrote: mikey

archae86 wrote:

mikey wrote:

All outside circuits have them as well, but like kitchens and bathroom one ground fault detector can cover more than a few actual outlets and finding where the tripped breaker is can be a pain in the butt!! ie one of mine tripped from the Christmas lights and the rest was outside on the opposite side of the house!!

Yes indeed.  I created a fault while testing a purge pump in a bucket and tripped the GFI serving a socket outside the house.  I had no idea, and thought that a particle detector which got power from the same circuit had failed and bought another.  Of course the next did not work there either and after looking for and failing to find the GFI I gave up and power the particle detector from another socket.  Well over a year later I realized that the GFI on a bathroom socket on the opposite side of the house was tripped (I pretty nearly never plug things in there, so had not noticed).  That turned out to be the offending tripped one, so I have power on that outside socket again.

Some of the wiring in my house is downright whimsical.  There is a kitchen circuit with two GFIs on it.  Puzzling, that one. 

My kitchen has 2 gfi's as well makes no sense given the size or my kitchen

Scrooge McDuck
Scrooge McDuck
Joined: 2 May 07
Posts: 1052
Credit: 17887304
RAC: 11588

The imperial units begin to

The imperial units begin to reconquer the continent. In the last decade you can only buy kitchen measuring cups here, where in addition to scales for eights, quarters, or half a liter and milliliters, there are also scales for "cups" and "fl ozs" (whatever that means) printed on the scale. It's outrageous. I haven't checked the kitchen utilities in French supermarkets but I fear, it's the same situation there.

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