• XEAL@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    I love how the warning just asks you to make sure but doesn’t really try to talk you out of it.

      • idunnololz@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        This business kind of sucks. If you make good quality products it will work too well so no one would ever recommend it so you get no exposure. If you make shitty quality ones all the ones that survive is going to bitch about it and lawsuits and blah blah blah.

        Anyways if anyone has any ideas on how to turn this business around let me know.

        • pivot_root@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          The funny part is that it wouldn’t even work.

          If the plug was on a GFCI outlet, it would trip once neutral and hot are shorted.

          If it wasn’t on a GFCI outlet, it would be an inefficient water heater. Current is inversely proportional to resistance, and the inch of tap water between both conductors has a significantly lower resistance than the human sitting at the other side of the tub. At American voltages of 110V, the worst thing that will probably happen is the wires heat up from the current passing through them. Now, if it only had the live wire exposed and you had a metal tub, that might be a different story…

          • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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            7 months ago

            You assume the neutral wire is present and connected to the neutral prong, as it is in typical appliances. If I were to make this ducky, I wouldn’t connect anything to the neutral or ground prongs in the plug. Indeed, I’d connect all three wires in the cord to the hot prong.

            • pivot_root@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              That is my first assumption, yeah. I did note at the end if they intentionally didn’t connect neutral and ground and it was a metal tub, that would work

          • nilloc
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            7 months ago

            It’s got a British plug so it’s at least 200 volts.

            But yeah, probably ok if the water isn’t too salty and you stay away from touching the electrodes.

            I’m still not getting in with one though. At over 6 feet, I take up the whole tub + most of the time anyway.

            • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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              7 months ago

              But yeah, probably ok if the water isn’t too salty

              If you’re going to be passing a current through your bath water, you would want the bath water to be as conductive as possible. You don’t want the salt water in your body to be the path of least resistance. You want the current to flow around you, not through you.

  • jkrtn@lemmy.ml
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    7 months ago

    Really could not have a better demonstration of what a joke the CE label is.

        • ProgrammingSocks@pawb.social
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          7 months ago

          I’m inclined to believe that it’s not just “not respecting the proportions” but rather manufacturers putting a fake logo to create the appearance of safety. From your link:

          “The Commission was also aware of fraudulent misuse of the mark on products that did not comply with the standards, but that this is a separate issue.”

          • Arthur Besse@lemmy.ml
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            7 months ago

            I’m inclined to believe that it’s not just “not respecting the proportions” but rather manufacturers putting a fake logo to create the appearance of safety. From your link:

            “The Commission was also aware of fraudulent misuse of the mark on products that did not comply with the standards, but that this is a separate issue.”

            Why would you be inclined to believe that manufacturers of non-conformant products would be intentionally using a nonstandard version of the mark instead of the correctly-proportioned one which they can use just as easily?

            And why haven’t you edited your comment to remove that image making the false claim that a CE mark with nonstandard proportions is a “China Export Symbol”?

            • ProgrammingSocks@pawb.social
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              7 months ago

              It was already deleted, you probably just have it cached. 1000005407

              And sorry but I have no idea what you’re trying to say in your paragraph. Regardless of why we’re literally looking at one in the OP. Which is, as if I need to repeat this, a literal suicide device.

              • Arthur Besse@lemmy.ml
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                7 months ago

                And sorry but I have no idea what you’re trying to say in your paragraph.

                Let me try rephrasing it: Why do you think a manufacturer of a non-conformant product (who wants to be perceived as conformant) would intentionally use a nonstandard version of the mark, instead of the standard one? Note that the standard mark is not a certification or proof of conformance of any kind; it is merely a way for the manufacturer to affirm that they are conformant. It is illegal to sell non-conformant products in the European Economic Area regardless of if they carry the standard CE mark or not.

                Regardless of why we’re literally looking at one in the OP. Which is, as if I need to repeat this, a literal suicide device.

                Did you think we’re looking at an actual non-conformant product, and that it used a non-standard CE mark to deceive consumers? I thought it was pretty clear we were looking at a satirical fake product, and I assume the non-standard version of the CE mark was used unintentionally. If it was intentional, it was certainly not to deceive consumers but perhaps could have been an overcautious artist worried about trademark infringement.

                FWIW i looked it up and the image in the post is an artwork titled “electric bath duck for suicidal tendency” created in 2001 by Nicolas Gaudron while he was at the Royal College of Art in London.

                It was a brief meme in 2007, being featured on wired.com via ohgizmo.com via ubergizmo.com via gearfuse.com via haha.nu (this was back when there was more of a culture of attributing sources of things on the web). In 2011 it appeared on whokilledbambi.co.uk, and in 2016 it made it to /r/rubberducks.