ban-all-sheds said:
If you had asked him to draw diagrams explaining how his lighting circuit worked, what all the conductors were at the rose, what the switch did, and how it was connected up, do you think he could have done it?
No, but he had a go at a like-for-like according to what he saw (as a lot of people would do), but made the mistake of not writing it all down.
I don't know what all the wires going from my computers PSU into the motherboard are for, but that wouldn't stop me having a go replacing it.
ban-all-sheds said:
ban-all-sheds said:
He doesn't think that creating a L/N or L/E fault is unsafe.
When did he say that?
when I turn the electric back on it trips the circuit
there was no safety issue
He was talking about safety
when working on the light fitting. Those two quotes have been taken out of context.
ban-all-sheds said:
We all do.
ban-all-sheds said:
Didn't learn before doing.
What is there to learn? Diagram shows 3 wires, all colour coded... but as I said, a little knowledge... but at least he owned up to it.
Have you ever test driven a car without reading the manual fully first?
ban-all-sheds said:
Want to take a bet on him having the right tools?
No, but a stanley knife and hacksaw are considered useful (if not better?) alternatives when stripping SWA, and their not the right tool either.
What tools does anyone need for a replacement of a light fitting, other than a screwdriver? Testing afterwards is an electricians game, rarely practised by the public.
ban-all-sheds said:
The same would be true if car brake components came with as simplified and dangerous instructions/diagrams as these; Mr Haynes would be bankrupt in a fortnight, and we'd see a lot more cars with brake failure.
But you can get electrical manuals of the quality of Haynes manuals.
Why buy one if the A5 leaflet in the box seems to come with all you need? Like I say, if you simplify anything you increase the risk of things going wrong. That's why the automotive industry doesn't do it.
ban-all-sheds said:
So if someone posts after they have b******d up their brakes and crashed the car, what reaction do they get?
If they post after they've distorted their cylinder head by tightening the bolts too much, or in the wrong order, what reaction do they get?
The get told to seek professional advice or a Haynes manual. But they don't get asked why they started the job in the first place, as most mechanics will themselves confess to damaging someone's pride and joy at one time or another owing to either stupidity, ignorance, forgetfulness, laziness, complacency, or a combination of the above.
ban-all-sheds said:
And I would remind you I did
not start having a go at the OP:
This is a genuine question, motivated by curiosity, not a disguised dig at you:
But then why raise the question? If it wasn't a disguised dig set up to embarrass the OP then what answer were you hoping to get?
The guy soon realised he was out of his depth and was on here quick smart to get some answers. He could have spent all night swapping wires, leaving some out and creating 6 shorts in the process to get to a solution that worked.