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Stupid Homeowner Stories

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chperplt

Registered User
Joined
Nov 25, 2001
Posts
4,123
My parents come over a few months ago and notice that one of the four kitchen lights is out. I never noticed it and didn't really care. When the other three go, I'll replace them.

Well, two of the other three kitchen lights went out last week. I went to the store and bought 4 new bulbs at $4.50 a piece. These are the 2 year bulbs so they say.

I put them all in and then hit the switch. They all came on except for the light over the sink that my dad had commented on before. So, I get back up there and switch bulbs to see if the new one is bad.. It still won't light up, but the other three work fine..

My wife and I go out to run some errands and come home. I walk over to the stove area and see a switch next to the disposal switch.. What does that do I wonder..... It turns the fuking light above the sink on!!

I've only been in the house a year... What a moron I am!!
 
Dude that was awesome. I love it when I happen upon a good nugget like that in this forum with all the religious and political talk. :)
 
I walk over to the stove area and see a switch next to the disposal switch.. What does that do I wonder..... It turns the light above the sink on!!

When my wife and I first met, she had been living in her townhouse/apartment for over 8-years. She did not cook very often but when she did, she would usually microwave or cook something like soup. Her reason for this was because the light over the stove never worked and she did not know how to turn on the vent hood fan for the stove. One evening I wanted to cook something that required browning turkey and asked her how to turn the light on over the stove? She replied that it was broken and never worked to which I suggested that we replace the bulb. She replied that the bulb had been replaced but still did not work when I noticed that there were two switchs located next to the stove and considering there were no windows in the kitchen, would have been hard to see unless the light over the stove was turned on. I decided to flip one of them on only to have the light above the stove turn on! :confused: Next I flipped the other switch and the vent hood fan started up - and my soon to be wife (an attorney) was suddenly very, very embarassed. :)

After we got engaged, we leased a nice house that had a Microwave/Electric oven combination that included a bread warmer. While moving in, the task of putting things away in the kitchen fell equally on both of our shoulders and not knowing any better, she assumed that the bread warmer was a suitable place for storing pots, oven pans and tupperware! A week later she decided to bake some buttermilk biscuits and shortly after the biscuits were in the oven, I started to notice the pungent odor of styrene melting!

I proceeded to the kitchen and looked at the oven but the opaque coating on the glass did not reveal much so I then opened the oven to look inside. As soon as I opened the oven door, sooty, black smoke came belching out followed by the kitchen smoke detector going off! I got a kitchen mitt and removed the blackened biscuits but the smoke appeared to be comming from the bread warmer. I then began to pull the bread warmer drawer open when a large lick of flames rushed out.

I immediately closed the drawer and then turned to my now wide-eyed wife and above the screeching whine of the smoke detector asked her to call 9-1-1! Being the calm, cool, and collected type who is not phased by little things like setting the kitchen on fire, she quickly asked "who's that?" Although the fire department was there in minutes, fortunately the flames were able to be doused easily with a pitcher of water before they arrived. The fire fighters were very understanding and were even nice enough to setup one of their industrial electric fans to help ventilate the lingering smoke out of the kitchen!


Michael
 
Last edited:
I was in the garage of my house and was going to use a drill to do some work. Damm if the drill didn't run. I tried another outlet and same thing, no drill sound.

So, I go in the kitchen and plug the drill in and whirrrrrrr it goes.

What the heck?

I go down in the basement and I can't even find a circuit breaker for the garage. Hmmmmmm?

I then go upstairs and and drag all my work into the kitchen to drill and saw on. Made a big mess. Cleaned it up with the vacuum.

I decided to vacuum the rest of the house since I draged the appliance out. Was working my way down the hall when I ran out of cord. So I go ahead and plug the vacuum in the outlet in the bathroom. The vacuum doesn't work now. Hmmmm? The outlet is one of those Ground Fault Indicator kind with the two buttons on it. I push in the red one with the word "reset" on it and the vacuum spools up.

Now I'm curious. I go out to the garage and plug the drill in and it runs!

Who would have thought the dang outlets in the garage would have been wired to the GFI outlet in the bathroom?!!?
 
chperplt said:
I walk over to the stove area and see a switch next to the disposal switch.. What does that do I wonder..... It turns the fuking light above the sink on!!

I've only been in the house a year... What a moron I am!!

Don't feel bad, I have been in my "new" house for almost 3 years... there is still a switch in my living room that I have no idea what it does... It's a friggin' mystery!
 
Re: Re: Stupid Homeowner Stories

Falcon Capt said:
Don't feel bad, I have been in my "new" house for almost 3 years... there is still a switch in my living room that I have no idea what it does... It's a friggin' mystery!

Until a few months from now you get a letter from a guy in bavaria telling you to
'cut it the heII out'
 
Re: Re: Re: Stupid Homeowner Stories

Dash8 said:
Until a few months from now you get a letter from a guy in bavaria telling you to
'cut it the heII out'

LOL, classic Stephen Wright...that guy was a scream.

I lost one of a pair of socks. Looked everywhere, couldn't find it, so I called information. I go "where is my sock", she said "behind the couch" and it was.

I got home late one night. It was dark, and I accidently tried to use my car keys to open the door. The house started. So I drove it around the neighborhood. Cop pulls me over, asks "where do you live", I go "right here".

He is the master of the deadpan delivery.

Best.
Nu
 
FN FAL said:
I was in the garage of my house and was going to use a drill to do some work. Damm if the drill didn't run. I tried another outlet and same thing, no drill sound.

So, I go in the kitchen and plug the drill in and whirrrrrrr it goes.

What the heck?

I go down in the basement and I can't even find a circuit breaker for the garage. Hmmmmmm?

I then go upstairs and and drag all my work into the kitchen to drill and saw on. Made a big mess. Cleaned it up with the vacuum.

I decided to vacuum the rest of the house since I draged the appliance out. Was working my way down the hall when I ran out of cord. So I go ahead and plug the vacuum in the outlet in the bathroom. The vacuum doesn't work now. Hmmmm? The outlet is one of those Ground Fault Indicator kind with the two buttons on it. I push in the red one with the word "reset" on it and the vacuum spools up.

Now I'm curious. I go out to the garage and plug the drill in and it runs!

Who would have thought the dang outlets in the garage would have been wired to the GFI outlet in the bathroom?!!?
I did this 2 weeks ago and it took me a week to find the GFI, in the freaking laundry room. I put in a hot tub and discovered that my a/c was wired with #12 wire and was melting thru the insulation. Send Fire Marshal Bill over. Maybe they should U.A. test construction workers.

Where's my hammer?
 
LOL, classic Stephen Wright...that guy was a scream.

this was one of my favorites:

"I'm going on a trip next week, a friend asked me how i was getting to the airport, told him i don't know, but i'm flying to one of them."
 
Re: Re: Stupid Homeowner Stories

Falcon Capt said:
Don't feel bad, I have been in my "new" house for almost 3 years... there is still a switch in my living room that I have no idea what it does... It's a friggin' mystery!
I would bet that it controls power to a receptacle, probably designed to control a table lamp. It might even connect to only one half of a receptacle. I'd die of curiosity trying to find out.
 
Re: Re: Re: Stupid Homeowner Stories

TonyC said:
I would bet that it controls power to a receptacle, probably designed to control a table lamp. It might even connect to only one half of a receptacle. I'd die of curiosity trying to find out.
Oh I tried them all the first week we were in the house (both sides of each and every outlet in that room and all ajoining rooms)...

Finally got distracted and gave up...
 
Don't feel bad, I have been in my "new" house for almost 3 years... there is still a switch in my living room that I have no idea what it does... It's a friggin' mystery!
I have an extra switch next the one that turns on the gas fireplace. Turns out its for the optional fan that is not installed.
 
I did this 2 weeks ago and it took me a week to find the GFI, in the freaking laundry room. I put in a hot tub and discovered that my a/c was wired with #12 wire and was melting thru the insulation. Send Fire Marshal Bill over. Maybe they should U.A. test construction workers.
Did you mean your airconditioning was wired lightly or the whole house's alternating current wiring? I would have thought that electrical code would have prevented such a dangerous thing?

Looks like you may be a victim of wiring that met an "old" code when your house was built, or fradulent contractors. Or maybe the previous owner did a lot of electrical "handyman" craft work around the house.

Good thing you found out the wiring was a little light...I'd hate to think what would have happened.
 
We've been in this apt for 6 months now....following the 'what the he!! does this switch do' theme, there's a switch in my bedroom, right by my door that I haven't figured out yet....and I'm beginning to think it's one of those things I never will! :)
 
FN FAL said:
Did you mean your airconditioning was wired lightly or the whole house's alternating current wiring? I would have thought that electrical code would have prevented such a dangerous thing?

Looks like you may be a victim of wiring that met an "old" code when your house was built, or fradulent contractors. Or maybe the previous owner did a lot of electrical "handyman" craft work around the house.

Good thing you found out the wiring was a little light...I'd hate to think what would have happened.

According to code in the local area they are supposed to use #8 for all 220. My house is 7 years old. Something tells me the contractor had something fishy going on. I would have never found the problem if I didn’t put in my hot tub.
 
quote from FN FAL:

"Who would have thought the dang outlets in the garage would have been wired to the GFI outlet in the bathroom?!!?"



I feel your pain.....An outlet in my basement is connected to the GFI out in the garage.
 
Ailerongirl said:
...there's a switch in my bedroom, right by my door that I haven't figured out yet....and I'm beginning to think it's one of those things I never will! :)

Could be for power to/for a ceiling fan or if there is a ceiling fan installed, then it could be for a light fixture attachment for the ceiling fan.

Just a guess..... :confused:
 
How about moving from one house to another...

"we had a Uhaul truck in our driveway packed with boxes, etc, and this neighbor comes over and says ya'll moving?" I said " naww we just pack that truck up once or twice a week and drive around the block a few times out of sheer boredom"


:D

3 5 0
 
avoidingmyboss said:
According to code in the local area they are supposed to use #8 for all 220. My house is 7 years old. Something tells me the contractor had something fishy going on. I would have never found the problem if I didn’t put in my hot tub.

Bah, builders annoy me in the extreme. If you build in a development or with a large builder, you have to watch them every day, and call them on every single thing you find wrong. They just brazenly try to get away with as much as they can, betting on the fact that most people are too lazy, busy and/or stupid to catch them at it.

You go into a car dealership, pay $$$ to order a car, and magically, said car appears 3 months later, to your specs. You pay the nice man, sign the papers, take the keys and drive away. Too bad building/buying a house isn't like that.

Best,
Nu
 

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