Claire, our youngest, is a very adventurous child. She can climb a chainlink fence higher than my head. She does very willful and headstrong things. Sometimes, dangerous things.
For example, she knows never to play with lightbulbs and sockets.

Sometimes she forgets. Ah well. She unplugged a night light and removed the light bulb. No big worry. I'll put the light bulb back in, no problem. But... huh... it won't go in. Because there's a piece of metal in the socket. Good thing it was unplugged!

Uh... except it wasn't, originally. She removed the light bulb and jammed in an IKEA widget while the night light was plugged in. You see all the burn marks inside, and on the metal widget?
I'm buying a solar powered night light tomorrow morning.
For example, she knows never to play with lightbulbs and sockets.
Sometimes she forgets. Ah well. She unplugged a night light and removed the light bulb. No big worry. I'll put the light bulb back in, no problem. But... huh... it won't go in. Because there's a piece of metal in the socket. Good thing it was unplugged!
Uh... except it wasn't, originally. She removed the light bulb and jammed in an IKEA widget while the night light was plugged in. You see all the burn marks inside, and on the metal widget?
I'm buying a solar powered night light tomorrow morning.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-09 02:56 am (UTC)a) where was that Ikea widget removed from? A desk? a book-case?
b) just how stable is *that* device missing this widget?
c) if this is just a spare loose Ikea part, why do you still have it handy for junior MacGyver's to fondle and frolic with?
::B::
no subject
Date: 2009-08-09 04:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-09 05:42 am (UTC)Also, Pyat, consider installing GFCI outlets if you don't have them, especially in the bedrooms but also around the house. They're not too expensive (cf. this one from Home Depot (http://www.homedepot.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?langId=-1&storeId=10051&catalogId=10053&N=5yc1vZ1xr5Zbm4n&R=100561821)) and they're extremely worthwhile.
I don't think they trip on arc faults (fork stabbed in both slots, Ikea doohickey across a light socket); that duty goes to your circuit breakers. However, they do trip on ground faults, which are more important than a shower of sparks; they protect from the "kid-to-ground" sort of fault, like hairdryers dropped in the sink, frayed cords, and the like. It doesn't protect against everything, but for the extra personal safety, there's no reason not to have them now that they're cheap.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-09 01:25 pm (UTC)How does one pop in an arc arrest circuit breaker? :)
no subject
Date: 2009-08-09 01:58 pm (UTC)Well, if you have circuit breakers in your electrical box, you kill the mains power, unscrew the retaining screw on the current breaker that services Claire's room, remove it, plug in a new breaker of equivalent amperage rating and physical dimensions, put in its retaining screw and turn the mains power back on.
If you still have fuses, you ignore all that - replacing your basement box with circuit breakers, while technically simple work, is the sort of area even I go "Eeeeeh, get an electrician" and they don't make AFAs for fuseboxen, AFAIK. I agree with other comments about putting in a GFCI, though, whether you do an arc fault arrestor or not - it's added safety for the little one, and it's really easy to do. Put them in your bathroom and either side of the kitchen sink while you're at it...
no subject
Date: 2009-08-09 01:23 pm (UTC)B) It's in pieces in the garage!
C) I don't know where she was keeping it, because we cleaned and swept the room thoroughly.