T
Trickynick1001
Guest
Just a quick question for any electicians or the like out there:
In the summer I work construction, and I've noticed something odd.
Before the ductwork goes up in a house (that's my job), the
electricians put in temporary lightbulbs, so we can see in the
basement. They just screw the fixture to a support beam. The bulbs
are regular 60w incandescent bulbs, like you'd see in a household
fixture. I've noticed that when I hammer on the beam that the bulbs
are on, they will often get noticeably brighter after a couple hits,
usually followed by blowing out. Anyone know why this is?
My only idea is that maybe the filliament gets stretched somehow due
to the vibration, and it glows brighter because there's more
resistance created? I'm no electrician, so I don't know if that even
makes sense. Any thoughts?
~Nick
In the summer I work construction, and I've noticed something odd.
Before the ductwork goes up in a house (that's my job), the
electricians put in temporary lightbulbs, so we can see in the
basement. They just screw the fixture to a support beam. The bulbs
are regular 60w incandescent bulbs, like you'd see in a household
fixture. I've noticed that when I hammer on the beam that the bulbs
are on, they will often get noticeably brighter after a couple hits,
usually followed by blowing out. Anyone know why this is?
My only idea is that maybe the filliament gets stretched somehow due
to the vibration, and it glows brighter because there's more
resistance created? I'm no electrician, so I don't know if that even
makes sense. Any thoughts?
~Nick