This is my story and it's all about my non-handyman skills. About a month ago I had to purchase a timer for some accent lights on the outside of my home. The timer is the kind that you replace the on and off switch with. So I spent about an 20 minutes installing the timer and everything was working beautifully for about 2 weeks.
Then one night coming home late, I noticed that the one of the light was out. So I'm thinking it's the light bulb, and off to the hardware for a replacement. Because naturally I would not keep a spare around to make things easy. Off to the hardware, buy the bulb, go back home, replace the bulb, flip on the switch and nothing. So I take out the new bulb and screw it into a lamp, turn the lamp on and hallelujah there is light.
So Mr Non-Handyman thinks, after one one thousands of a second thought, it's got to be the fixture. Mr Non-Handyman takes out the fixture and heads off to the lighting store. In Willie's world, the fixture is a 4 inch fixture, so I am thinking 30 bucks at the most. Well that's not even close. How about 95 dollars, "Holy crap Batman!". OK, I buy the fixture, which is not made of gold as I suspected, and back home I go to replace the fixture with the new one.
After I install the fixture, screw in the light bulb, which I now have a spare, turn the switch on and nothing . Replace the bulb, nothing. "Oh Jebus why do you hate me." That is when the bulb went off, and not the bulb in the fixture but the light bulb over my head. Check the timer hook up butt head. I pulled off the cover and pulled out the timer and there it was, a black wire just staring at me all by it self, not attached to any other wire. I attach the wire, put the cover on and hit the switch. We have light.
Pros: I have a extra fixture and a replacement bulb.
Cons: I spent 95 dollars for nothing and waisted about 3 hours that I could have spent on the couch doing something to improve my life, like watching the Simpsons.
3 comments:
I am similarly blessed with non-handyman skills. The reason I still haven't hooked up my refrigerator's ice/water machine one year after its purchase is that I don't want my family to drown.
I hear your pain. My father had less skills than I have. His tool box was a Elecrolux mothball can filled with 2 flat head screwdrivers, one bent, a knife and a hatchet. What more do you need for those little jobs around the house.
My father is the opposite to yours Uncle Willie. He is a very gifted handyman.
Pity so little of it filtered via osmosis to me.
- Snoot
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