Hal Bissinger/COMSYSTEC wrote on Mon, 12 July 2004 18:45 |
The lasher is pulled along between the poles on a rope attached usually to the stringer bucket truck that the crew is using but it could also be pulled by hand (or a horse ) if you can't drive a truck along the route. |
globalaudiovideo wrote on Mon, 12 July 2004 23:51 |
Quick question to all... maybe it's just me but it seems like when sometimes people ask really simple questions on this board like, "what's an edison plug look like?", of course my first idea would be to show them a simple picture of the two vertical blades and a ground prong. But a lot of the time, you will hear stuff like "well, the NEMA # for THAT connector is..." Well hey, the simple jist is two vertical prongs and a ground prong. Remember, they asked "what's it LOOK like". I dunno, just a thought. I guess it never hurts to include some extra info... |
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I'm wiring a distro. What does an Edison plug look like? |
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Hire a professional to wire your distro so you will meet code, be legal, and not kill anyone. No, really, you ain't got the knowledge and skillz to do this safely and legally. BTW, an Edison plug is a NEMA 5-15P which has two vertical prongs and a ground prong. |
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An Edison plug has two vertical prongs and a ground prong. Have at it, mate! |
globalaudiovideo wrote on Tue, 13 July 2004 10:31 |
Hey Vince, how are ya? Ya, that example you described is much different than, say, "a guy told me that his amps all have edison plugs." "Guys, what's an edison plug look like?" So ya, the situation you described is definitely not what I was referring to. In that case, yes, you would WANT to be much more detailed because they are asking for the info... and if they're building a distro, they better already know about the terms you're using, eh? Thanks Steve |