Yeah, I need my safe space now. Oh sheet, its full of demons at the moment, need to take a number.Along those lines: a friend-you know who you are - sent me this one
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Yeah, I need my safe space now. Oh sheet, its full of demons at the moment, need to take a number.Along those lines: a friend-you know who you are - sent me this one
I would appreciate it if you preceded this sort of post with an offensive comment warning. I have a right to not expose myself to traumatic material and you are currently violating my rights.My new fruit salad
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So a couple of weeks ago I put two new batteries in my 40. Unknown to me, the insulation on the top of one of the positive connectors was touching the inside of the hood... after some spirited driving, and towing of my boat, that insulation wore off... and the power of two brand new deep cycle RV batteries was unleashed in a fiery fury of flickering mayhem on my hood. And my wife got to experience it up close on her side of the truck.
First, the engine cut out, then giant sparks and lightning arcs jumped from the front to the rear hinges. We immediately jumped out and saw the current creating flames on the hood latches. It took me about 2 seconds to realize what the problem was and in that time both hood latches turned bright red like a piece of metal straight out of a forge.
Seeing flames as the current burned the paint on the latch connection point, I knew I had only one choice and I knew it would hurt. But not as much as the pain of standing there helpless as my baby electrocuted itself. I grabbed the hood latch and threw open the hood. Only a minor burn on my strategically used left hand. The handle part of the latch thankfully slightly separated from the still red hot glowing pin of death.
And ya know, I put some duct tape on it and drove home - no big deal.
So a couple of weeks ago I put two new batteries in my 40. Unknown to me, the insulation on the top of one of the positive connectors was touching the inside of the hood... after some spirited driving, and towing of my boat, that insulation wore off... and the power of two brand new deep cycle RV batteries was unleashed in a fiery fury of flickering mayhem on my hood. And my wife got to experience it up close on her side of the truck.
First, the engine cut out, then giant sparks and lightning arcs jumped from the front to the rear hinges. We immediately jumped out and saw the current creating flames on the hood latches. It took me about 2 seconds to realize what the problem was and in that time both hood latches turned bright red like a piece of metal straight out of a forge.
Seeing flames as the current burned the paint on the latch connection point, I knew I had only one choice and I knew it would hurt. But not as much as the pain of standing there helpless as my baby electrocuted itself. I grabbed the hood latch and threw open the hood. Only a minor burn on my strategically used left hand. The handle part of the latch thankfully slightly separated from the still red hot glowing pin of death.
And ya know, I put some duct tape on it and drove home - no big deal.
Lol. thanks man. I'm just glad I knew what the problem was. For a split second, my wife said "it's on fire" and I had the "oh s***, I don't have a fire extinguisher with me" moment. Which was quickly replaced by the "there's a gas station 200 yards away", then the "Oh, it's a short circuit" thought. That all happened in 2 seconds or less.@jamesurq wow. Glad you were ok. How much damage?
So now we have "Biscuit" and "'Sparky" ..... how about the 60?
Considering what happenned with it this week, I'm thinking Bursty? Or Pops? Or Hissy? Eileen? Up for suggestions...
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Incidently, here's the pics from the 'fire'....
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You can see where the metal has heated and cooled. That pin was completely red and glowing. That's a lot of amps!
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Speaking of fire . . . Everyone down in Charlotte getting enough oxygen?
This for real?
Smoke from wildfires prompts air quality concerns across Charlotte