Hi Sup Forums, I'm completely ignorant about electricity, don't even know if this is the right board but here it goes...
why does a normal lightbulb connected to a outlet pops as soon it's connected? pic related
Hi Sup Forums, I'm completely ignorant about electricity, don't even know if this is the right board but here it goes
Safety feature to prevent you from poking metal objects into the socket.
It doesn't, asking as you connect it properly.
but why when i connect a normal plug that goes to a lightbulb it doesn't explode? I mean, if i plug a normal lamp and turn it on it doesn't pop
one wire needs to go to the side, not the bottom
Take a video.
you mean like this?
you got it!
for reference
and it shouldn't pop right? could you please tell me why? i'm sorry to ask, but as i said i'm ignorant in electricity...
if you look at the picture you see 3 points where you can add a wire. most bulbs only have 2: the side and the one on the end. so assume the low and medium wattage shizzle is only one contact point. I have no idea why it would pop if you connect the two wires to the same point, as essentially that's a short and your circuit breaker should go off, not the lamp. maybe you're using a bulb that's not meant to plug in straight to the socket, but one that needs a transformer?
when i plugged it like in my first picture the circuit breaker went off but the lightbulb also popped... i've checked if it's compatible with the socket and it is... it is probably like you said, i've just checked my other lamp and the lightbulb is connected on the end AND the"lateral" part.. anyway, thank you for your explanation user, it was very clear
You're right about the last part. OP is asking why a lightbulb plugged straight into the wall pops but one in a lamp plugged into the wall doesn't. To answer his question, it's because the lightbulb plugged into the wall has too much voltage/charge flowing through it. However, the lamp contains a transformer that reduces the voltage/charge to a level that the lightbulb can handle.
>However, the lamp contains a transformer that reduces the voltage/charge to a level that the lightbulb can handle
oh NOW i've got it! it's because of the reducer! so if i were to put a reducer in the circuit i've drawin in the second picture it wouldn't explode?
Why did you post a 3-way bulb? That's only going to confuse people.
lamps do not have transformers in. standard bulbs connect directly to mains (says 240 or 120V on top).
OPs bulb must be some retarded thing or he's connecting it in some retarded way. how can you even fuck this up, are you like holding the wires on or what
i held them just like in my first pic, i will try with the methods they told me and see
post pic of the text on the bulb and pic of the connector
OP is retarded. Standard lightbulbs connect directly to main at 120V (in north america) and draw current according to their resistance. So if you have a 60W 120V lightbulb, it will draw 0.5A, and must have a resistance of 240Ω.
If you connect the wires to the same terminal or connection, you're creating a short. It's the same thing as connecting the two wires to each other, the bulb doesn't even matter in this case.
and OP never replied
OP died
But when the filament of a lightbulb is at room temperature, the resistance is noticeably lower. It is a highly non-linear device.
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good show tho