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April 10, 2010 at 8:26 PM #538976April 10, 2010 at 8:39 PM #538039NotCrankyParticipant
[quote=CBad]Showed it to my husband and he said it’s a spring for the back of a chair.[/quote]
I like filter frame, but your husband’s input is also very possible .Someone on the archery blog said it was an electrical element of some sort…for an oven I think.
Looks like a short circuit to me. Could have some special metals or compounds in the field wire, with some resistance in them but it doesn’t look like it. If it does maybe it could be an element from a lighthouse bulb or some other big bulb.April 10, 2010 at 8:39 PM #538161NotCrankyParticipant[quote=CBad]Showed it to my husband and he said it’s a spring for the back of a chair.[/quote]
I like filter frame, but your husband’s input is also very possible .Someone on the archery blog said it was an electrical element of some sort…for an oven I think.
Looks like a short circuit to me. Could have some special metals or compounds in the field wire, with some resistance in them but it doesn’t look like it. If it does maybe it could be an element from a lighthouse bulb or some other big bulb.April 10, 2010 at 8:39 PM #538629NotCrankyParticipant[quote=CBad]Showed it to my husband and he said it’s a spring for the back of a chair.[/quote]
I like filter frame, but your husband’s input is also very possible .Someone on the archery blog said it was an electrical element of some sort…for an oven I think.
Looks like a short circuit to me. Could have some special metals or compounds in the field wire, with some resistance in them but it doesn’t look like it. If it does maybe it could be an element from a lighthouse bulb or some other big bulb.April 10, 2010 at 8:39 PM #538725NotCrankyParticipant[quote=CBad]Showed it to my husband and he said it’s a spring for the back of a chair.[/quote]
I like filter frame, but your husband’s input is also very possible .Someone on the archery blog said it was an electrical element of some sort…for an oven I think.
Looks like a short circuit to me. Could have some special metals or compounds in the field wire, with some resistance in them but it doesn’t look like it. If it does maybe it could be an element from a lighthouse bulb or some other big bulb.April 10, 2010 at 8:39 PM #538991NotCrankyParticipant[quote=CBad]Showed it to my husband and he said it’s a spring for the back of a chair.[/quote]
I like filter frame, but your husband’s input is also very possible .Someone on the archery blog said it was an electrical element of some sort…for an oven I think.
Looks like a short circuit to me. Could have some special metals or compounds in the field wire, with some resistance in them but it doesn’t look like it. If it does maybe it could be an element from a lighthouse bulb or some other big bulb.April 10, 2010 at 9:32 PM #538049LuckyInOCParticipantCan’t be an electrical heating element. No isolators between the wire and frame. No separation between ‘terminals’ (nobs at the ends). It would be a dead short. Could be some type of conductive (thru the metal) heating element or rack.
Lucky In OC
April 10, 2010 at 9:32 PM #538171LuckyInOCParticipantCan’t be an electrical heating element. No isolators between the wire and frame. No separation between ‘terminals’ (nobs at the ends). It would be a dead short. Could be some type of conductive (thru the metal) heating element or rack.
Lucky In OC
April 10, 2010 at 9:32 PM #538639LuckyInOCParticipantCan’t be an electrical heating element. No isolators between the wire and frame. No separation between ‘terminals’ (nobs at the ends). It would be a dead short. Could be some type of conductive (thru the metal) heating element or rack.
Lucky In OC
April 10, 2010 at 9:32 PM #538735LuckyInOCParticipantCan’t be an electrical heating element. No isolators between the wire and frame. No separation between ‘terminals’ (nobs at the ends). It would be a dead short. Could be some type of conductive (thru the metal) heating element or rack.
Lucky In OC
April 10, 2010 at 9:32 PM #539001LuckyInOCParticipantCan’t be an electrical heating element. No isolators between the wire and frame. No separation between ‘terminals’ (nobs at the ends). It would be a dead short. Could be some type of conductive (thru the metal) heating element or rack.
Lucky In OC
April 12, 2010 at 11:06 AM #538406sdduuuudeParticipantLiar’s club was only cool because you found out the answer at the end. This is just annoying. OK, but I love it.
Very unlikely a heating element, but not because it is a short circuit. That’s what heating elements are – a short circuit. The piece of metal between the two posts, though, would not be there if the rest of the heating element was to have current running through it. Those don’t look like electric connectors and the springy thingies would be welded to the frame all around, not allowed to move
Some kind of oven rack is also a decent theory, but why not just weld it solid, then
The designer designed spring and flex into the item. I can’t come up with anything other than a part of a chair.
Did you scour it for any numbers or anything ?
April 12, 2010 at 11:06 AM #538527sdduuuudeParticipantLiar’s club was only cool because you found out the answer at the end. This is just annoying. OK, but I love it.
Very unlikely a heating element, but not because it is a short circuit. That’s what heating elements are – a short circuit. The piece of metal between the two posts, though, would not be there if the rest of the heating element was to have current running through it. Those don’t look like electric connectors and the springy thingies would be welded to the frame all around, not allowed to move
Some kind of oven rack is also a decent theory, but why not just weld it solid, then
The designer designed spring and flex into the item. I can’t come up with anything other than a part of a chair.
Did you scour it for any numbers or anything ?
April 12, 2010 at 11:06 AM #538995sdduuuudeParticipantLiar’s club was only cool because you found out the answer at the end. This is just annoying. OK, but I love it.
Very unlikely a heating element, but not because it is a short circuit. That’s what heating elements are – a short circuit. The piece of metal between the two posts, though, would not be there if the rest of the heating element was to have current running through it. Those don’t look like electric connectors and the springy thingies would be welded to the frame all around, not allowed to move
Some kind of oven rack is also a decent theory, but why not just weld it solid, then
The designer designed spring and flex into the item. I can’t come up with anything other than a part of a chair.
Did you scour it for any numbers or anything ?
April 12, 2010 at 11:06 AM #539090sdduuuudeParticipantLiar’s club was only cool because you found out the answer at the end. This is just annoying. OK, but I love it.
Very unlikely a heating element, but not because it is a short circuit. That’s what heating elements are – a short circuit. The piece of metal between the two posts, though, would not be there if the rest of the heating element was to have current running through it. Those don’t look like electric connectors and the springy thingies would be welded to the frame all around, not allowed to move
Some kind of oven rack is also a decent theory, but why not just weld it solid, then
The designer designed spring and flex into the item. I can’t come up with anything other than a part of a chair.
Did you scour it for any numbers or anything ?
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