hello guys,
please check it out this product for how to chnage your chandelier bulb or other high bulb into easy step, please visit the link thanks.
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hello guys,
please check it out this product for how to chnage your chandelier bulb or other high bulb into easy step, please visit the link thanks.
'Highlight'
What's wrong with the traditional method?
A solution looking for a problem?
I wonder how it copes with bayonet fittings? And I'll bet that's the prototype has only been tested with screw in bulbs that were installed minutes before and not with bulbs where the heat/cool cycle has screwed them in tighter.
alan_m wrote in news:d3t8rkFn2blU1 @mid.individual.net:
I recall back in the late 60's I worked in a factory that was lit with
300watt lamps - the electricians used a device on a long pole to unscrew them. It usually worked.
Indeed. A simple step ladder does the job here.
News wrote in news: snipped-for-privacy@nospam.demon.co.uk:
On commercial premises you would have to ensure that a risk assessment has been done and that the member of staff had been properly trained. Insulated steps - locked off switch - someone to hold the steps - a safety hand - rail, etc.
[snip]
You'd still need that with this device. There's a possibility that after unscrewing the bulb it could fall out of the device and land on somebody's head. So hard hat and eye protection for the operator and barriers to keep other people out of the drop zone. And the elves will probably require you to have decontamination procedures in case the falling lamp is a CFL.
En el artículo , Mike Clarke escribió:
The H&S offer at one place I worked at was referred to as the 'work prevention officer' because he had absolutely no common sense. You couldn't get anything done without him invoking elfin safety.
I was working a new building in 1991 and we came in on a Monday morning to find the door to our photographic dark room had been changed to one with a window. This was "a safety requirement" in case the building was being evacuated and sombody needed to check that there was nobody left inside. all our photographic processing had to go to an outside firm with the consequent delay (and cost).
Objection!
Has the step-holder been properly trained in holding steps?
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