Bonehead Award of the year

   / Bonehead Award of the year #151  
I did a dumb one yesterday. My wife asked me to install a towel bar in the bathroom of our new to us house. I drilled the holes and mounted the rack before I remembered the wall had a pocket door behind the rack. By some miracle, I totally missed drilling the door and the screws were short enough so they missed the door, too.

Wait until you hang a wet towel on the new bar, and pull it off the wall, because the screws didn't "bite" into anything solid ;)
 
   / Bonehead Award of the year #152  
I did a dumb one yesterday. My wife asked me to install a towel bar in the bathroom of our new to us house. I drilled the holes and mounted the rack before I remembered the wall had a pocket door behind the rack. By some miracle, I totally missed drilling the door and the screws were short enough so they missed the door, too.

Nice! :laughing:
 
   / Bonehead Award of the year #153  
Wait until you hang a wet towel on the new bar, and pull it off the wall, because the screws didn't "bite" into anything solid ;)
Oh great. Now I have something else to worry about...lol
 
   / Bonehead Award of the year #154  
Wait until you hang a wet towel on the new bar, and pull it off the wall, because the screws didn't "bite" into anything solid ;)

Oh great. Now I have something else to worry about...lol


Wait until you put a hook on the back of a door and since you forgot (I'll do it later) to put the door stop on, the hook pokes a hole in the plaster wall behind the door. I've even done it more than once to make sure I got it right. :D
 
   / Bonehead Award of the year #155  
We have the standard 6 ft. fence in the backyard, and a few months ago, I heard about burglaries increasing dramatically in the entire city. To make sure this never happened to me, I got an electric fence and ran a single wire along the top of the fence.

Actually, I got the biggest cattle charger Tractor Supply had, made for 26 miles of fence. I then used an 8 ft. long ground rod, and drove it 7.5 ft. into the ground. The ground rod is the key, with the more you have in the ground, the better the fence works..


The good news, is that if a burglar does try to come over the fence, I can clearly visualize what my security system will do to him, and THAT gives me a warm and fuzzy feeling all over, which also reminds me to triple check before I mow.


Months late but have to say this is best post I have seen on TBN. Initially reading on bus from Logan Airport and wifey wondering why I was almost pissing myself. Had to shut laptop so passengers wouldn't have to endure me bellowing out... next day finished finished reading and wifey new why i was crying.... Thank you so much..... :laughing::laughing::laughing:
 
   / Bonehead Award of the year #156  
Recently moved into a new house and found a box for an unknown underground wire with a blank cover . Inside the wires were disconnected and wire nutted off. I kept wondering where that wire lead to. Yesterday my wife found the other end in the middle of the circle drive next to a tree. The previous owner said she used to have a light mounted to the tree. I see this as a great opportunity to install an outlet there to plug the weed whipper into. I get my wire tracer out and sure enough it is the same wire. So I mount a GFCI protected box on a stake and hook up the wires. Flip on the circuit breaker and ZAP, it clicks off. I'd neglected to do a resistance check :eek: - it turned out the black and ground wire have a dead short - probably happened when the new driveway was put in.

So back to square one.
 
   / Bonehead Award of the year #157  
Recently moved into a new house and found a box for an unknown underground wire with a blank cover . Inside the wires were disconnected and wire nutted off. I kept wondering where that wire lead to. Yesterday my wife found the other end in the middle of the circle drive next to a tree. The previous owner said she used to have a light mounted to the tree. I see this as a great opportunity to install an outlet there to plug the weed whipper into. I get my wire tracer out and sure enough it is the same wire. So I mount a GFCI protected box on a stake and hook up the wires. Flip on the circuit breaker and ZAP, it clicks off. I'd neglected to do a resistance check :eek: - it turned out the black and ground wire have a dead short - probably happened when the new driveway was put in.

So back to square one.

I had a similar situation with the house we built. The electrical contractor added an outlet about 5' off the floor in the living room for future TV mount. Apparently when they hung the drywall, they managed to short the black (hot) and ground together. He suggested two options to pass inspection... 1) tear open drywall (which at this point was finished/textured) replace wire, or 2) swap the black and white wires at both ends (the cable was only about 6 feet long connected to the nearest standard receptacle. That's what I did. I wrapped the white/neutral wire on both ends with black tape and used a white marker to ID the black as neutral. I also separated the ground coming from that TV outlet so it is effectively ungrounded. Works like a champ, passed inspection, and no issues.

Obviously that would preclude NOT having a GFCI in line as the neutral and ground circuit are bonded at the screw - but seeing as it is the only affected receptacle, I'm ok with it.
 
   / Bonehead Award of the year #158  
Very interesting thread. I thought about contributing some of my mistakes, but then decided:

(1) I ain't gonna tell on myself, and
(2) TBN might not have enough capacity for me to list all of them.

I am in this club!
 
   / Bonehead Award of the year #159  
So yesterday I'm rinsing off my PTO broadcast fertilizer spreader. I have the PTO engaged at idle speed to disperse the water at the rotary unit. Works great.

I needed a little more hose to get to the other side of the spreader, so I yanked on it, and the hose caught the rotary disk. Yanked the hose out of my hand, tore the nozzled right off the hose, and wrapped around the driveshaft on the spreader about 6 times before I could shut the PTO off. (I know, I know, I shouldn't have the PTO on when not of the tractor...but that's why this is labeled "Bonehead" award).

Luckily nobody got hurt, lost about 6 feet of hose, and cost me $2.50 for a new male fitting for the end of the hose. And increased my faith in God that I didn't get caught up in it !!
 
   / Bonehead Award of the year #160  
...........Luckily nobody got hurt, lost about 6 feet of hose, and cost me $2.50 for a new male fitting for the end of the hose. .........
I don't think my underwear would have been salvageable.
 

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