Let the smoke out

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:grin: okay I finally got it. "Let the smoke out".... geez.

So this is what you meant.:grin:

JChapelFire2.jpg
 
I let the smoke out on a smart switch a couple of months ago(wattstopper I think, 100$ bucks a piece if I remember correctly) The guy I was working under shoved me out of the way and proceeded to let the smoke out of another one...First time I've ever seen actual flames, lots of sparks but this was three foot flames. Very dragonlike.;)
 
Riograndeelectric said:
could some one please tell me what you are talking about. Smoke ?
This might help.:grin:
ELECTRICAL THEORY OF SMOKE...BY JOSEPH LUCAS

Positive ground depends upon proper circuit functioning, the transmission of negative ions by retention of the visible spectral manifestation known as "smoke". Smoke is the thing that makes electrical circuits work; we know this to be true because every time one lets the smoke out of the electrical system, it stops working. This can be verified repeatedly through empirical testing.

When, for example, the smoke escapes from an electrical component (i.e., say, a Lucas voltage regulator), it will be observed that the component stops working. The function of the wire harness is to carry the smoke from one device to another; when the wire harness "springs a leak", and lets all the smoke out of the system, nothing works afterwards. Starter motors were frowned upon in British Automobiles for some time, largely because they consume large quantities of smoke, requiring very large wires.

It has been noted that Lucas components are possibly more prone to electrical leakage than Bosch or generic Japanese electrics. Experts point out that this is because Lucas is British and all things British leak. British engines leak oil, shock absorbers, hydraulic forks and disk brakes leak fluid, British tires leak air and the British defense establishment leaks secrets...so, naturally, British electronics leak smoke.

Author Unknown
 
Riograndeelectric said:
could some one please tell me what you are talking about. Smoke ?

Plug a computer into one of those 277 volt outlets that sometimes happen when a cable gets marked wrong or landed in the wrong panel. Then you will see the smoke being let out......
 
Riograndeelectric said:
could some one please tell me what you are talking about. Smoke ?


They are talking about shorting out something or blowing it up. Put 220 to a 110 refrigerator and it smokes.
 
It's an old electrician joke. You 'use up all the smoke' in something because you did something wrong. So you go out and buy another one with more smoke in it.
 
480sparky said:
It's an old electrician joke. You 'use up all the smoke' in something because you did something wrong. So you go out and buy another one with more smoke in it.

And this helps us learn about the code how?
 
jaylectricity said:
And this helps us learn about the code how?

Your not in the NEC forum you are in the EC and EM forum here we often need to know how much it will cost when the smoke is let out and what to do with people who let it out. As in my reference to the smoke being let out of an F-16 (referred to as a lawn darts by former F-4 guys like me) it cost a lot to the tax payer money.
 
smoke in industrial area north of the tracks

smoke in industrial area north of the tracks

Open delta system has a lot of smoke in it when customer plugs every tool he owns into new outlet. Thank god the computer was smokeless.
 
LarryFine said:
Just curious: what is the speed of dark?

When ever you shine light onto dark, dark goes somewhere else. Since light can't catch it, dark must be faster than 186,000 MPS.

Edit: I can't believe I read this whole thread, and ..... responded. :)
 
Riograndeelectric said:
could some one please tell me what you are talking about. Smoke ?
OK, here it is in simpler terms:

From a sign in a motor shop:

***** NOTICE ******

Motors do not run on electricity. They run on smoke.

The electricity is only there to keep the smoke in.

Once the smoke gets out, the motor is no good.

Make sense now? :grin:
 
jaylectricity said:
And this helps us learn about the code how?
For the last in-depth discussion on the smoke theory of circuits, visit this thread. In post #10, Bob Alexander shared the unabridged comprehensive explanation of the ramifications of letting the smoke out. :)

If we don't understand the smoke theory, knowing trivial sections of code is for nought. :D
 
smoke vs code

smoke vs code

georgestolz said:
If we don't understand the smoke theory, knowing trivial sections of code is for nought. :D

It doesn't take long working in this field to learn about smoke. Some folks never learn code.
 
Baha Men

Who Let the "Smoke" out?
Dang, dang, dang, dang

When the party was nice, the party was jumpin' (Hey, Yippie, Yi, Yo)
And everybody havin' a ball (Hah, ho, Yippie Yi Yo)
I tell the fellas "start the name callin'" (Yippie Yi Yo)
And the girls report to the call
The poor smoke show down


Who Let the "Smoke" out?
Dang, dang, dang, dang
 
Dennis Alwon said:
Baha Men

Who Let the "Smoke" out?
Dang, dang, dang, dang

When the party was nice, the party was jumpin' (Hey, Yippie, Yi, Yo)
And everybody havin' a ball (Hah, ho, Yippie Yi Yo)
I tell the fellas "start the name callin'" (Yippie Yi Yo)
And the girls report to the call
The poor smoke show down


Who Let the "Smoke" out?
Dang, dang, dang, dang

OH TOH I'll be singing that around the shop
 
memyselfandI said:
Today I just so happened to let the smoke out of a piece of equipment. You know, letting the smoke out is easy... the problem is getting it to go back in. Thank goodness it wasn't my fault, seems there was some serious degredation of the insulation on some conductors in the equipment. Man it sure was alot of smoke though.

I was told that motors actually run on smoke,,,,,use up the smoke,,,trash the equipment
 
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