this post was submitted on 30 Nov 2023
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zerowaste

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Discussing ways to reduce waste and build community!

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This is a quick one, not an impressive repair, but maybe a nice demonstration of the perks of keeping stuff until its useful. I found a multi-socket extension cord/usb charger while digging through ewaste (I fix up laptops and give the stuff I find away on my local.Buy Nothing -type group).

Someone had really yanked on it (probably the plug was stuck behind something heavy) and when it came free, two of the prongs were bent, and the ground prong was ripped out altogether.

I had a spare 120v plug - about a year ago, I took some old extension cords from an estate cleanout. Awhile later, while helping a friend build an arcade cabinet, I dug one out and cut the socket off it to wire the cabinet up for electricity. Unfortunately, the sheathing around the individual wires inside the cord had crumbled away to almost nothing, and it wasn't safe to use. I gave the copper to a friend who sells metal to a junkyard, and kept the plugs from either end.

The actual rewiring isn't difficult, just stripped the wires and attached them to the correct terminals. I used an old neon tester my neighbor gave me to check my work. It lit up just fine and I didn't trip the circuit. Later I plugged a bricked, ewaste 1st gen ipad into the usb socket and it started charging just fine. So it looks like this worked out

So there's my excuse for why I keep all these odds and ends.Even when it's something as simple as this, there's something wonderful about being able to take multiple pieces of junk, combining them, and suddenly having a useful item.

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[โ€“] x4740N@lemmy.world 1 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (1 children)

PSA:

Safety switches / circuit breakers only protect the wiring inside the walls

They don't do anything for extension cords and power boards so don't overload them otherwise you will risk a house fire

[โ€“] JacobCoffinWrites 1 points 6 months ago

Yeah I generally don't love these extension cord / splitter combination because they make it too easy to casually plug in lots of stuff. I've been using this one but just for a box fan (old building, retrofitted for electricity with the absolute minimum number of outlets). When I do hook multiple things to one extension cord, I make sure it's something like power tools, where I know I can only use one at a time anyways, and that I'll always be there when its in use. I also check my cords for heat when they've been in use for awhile (I once found a daisy chained set of rack-mount power strips in a server room, where one of the plugs had melted to the socket it was plugged into, fusing them together. Pulling them apart broke the plastic outlet. I've been a little cautious ever since).