Gregishome
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 29, 2011
- Messages
- 811
People need to know what they are working with sometimes...
Tell us about your experience while working with electricity to where that you got shocked sooo bad, that you thought you were going to, " Give up the ghost ". .
I'll start with mine. It was 1970 and I was 18 y.o., and just out of trade school and had went to work for a elec/hvac/plumbing company. It was a Sunday and the whiskey distillery where we doing a pipe fitting project, was closed. It was just me and the pipefitter working in the room full of huge 22,000 gallon stainless steel whiskey tanks...
The PF needed the power removed from a 240 volt flow control valve so that he could remove it and re-pipe the line. Being a Sunday, there were no maintenance men on site and there was no disconnect on the valve. So, the PF looked at me and said, " Well boy, your the electrician here , get up there and unwire that valve so we can get done and go home " ...
I knew better than to work it hot, but he was the foreman and I didnt want to get fired on my first job. So I got on top of the tank with my insulated handle Klein tools and had to turn sideways to get to the valve. My shoulder was wedged between the top of the SS tank that had moisture on it, and the ceiling's steel bar joist. ...
I was being REAL careful and pulling one conductor loose at a time. Just as I was puling the last one back out of the way, it sprang loose from my pliers and wedged itself against my arm that was pinched in between the braces of the bar joist...
As the current went though me I couldnt get unstuck from between the ceiling's steel bar joist and tank. As the current kept pulsing through me, the only thing I know that saved me was that my body starting jerking so hard, it finally cleared itself from the ceiling joist. I still dont like pipe fitters to this day.
Tell us about your experience while working with electricity to where that you got shocked sooo bad, that you thought you were going to, " Give up the ghost ". .
I'll start with mine. It was 1970 and I was 18 y.o., and just out of trade school and had went to work for a elec/hvac/plumbing company. It was a Sunday and the whiskey distillery where we doing a pipe fitting project, was closed. It was just me and the pipefitter working in the room full of huge 22,000 gallon stainless steel whiskey tanks...
The PF needed the power removed from a 240 volt flow control valve so that he could remove it and re-pipe the line. Being a Sunday, there were no maintenance men on site and there was no disconnect on the valve. So, the PF looked at me and said, " Well boy, your the electrician here , get up there and unwire that valve so we can get done and go home " ...
I knew better than to work it hot, but he was the foreman and I didnt want to get fired on my first job. So I got on top of the tank with my insulated handle Klein tools and had to turn sideways to get to the valve. My shoulder was wedged between the top of the SS tank that had moisture on it, and the ceiling's steel bar joist. ...
I was being REAL careful and pulling one conductor loose at a time. Just as I was puling the last one back out of the way, it sprang loose from my pliers and wedged itself against my arm that was pinched in between the braces of the bar joist...
As the current went though me I couldnt get unstuck from between the ceiling's steel bar joist and tank. As the current kept pulsing through me, the only thing I know that saved me was that my body starting jerking so hard, it finally cleared itself from the ceiling joist. I still dont like pipe fitters to this day.

