EPIC FAIL!!! When working on high/mains voltage stuff, its far safer to be ungrounded. Go ground youself then touch a 33kV line, see what happens, assfucker.
wow, some of you guys are retarded. first off its called grounding not earthing, second of all even if the breaker is off he is still going to get electrocuted if his power cord or drill touches the water, it’s pretty basic really. don’t have to be a rocket scientist to figure that out, just need a functional brain.
If the drill hits the water electrical current will go ground through the water, not the ladder. If he’s on the ladder he’s fine. If he’s in the water he will feel a shock and might get hurt.
He could be at risk as well if he drills in to a live wire (although even then current may go through the drill ground wire).
Otherwise he should be OK. You need training on how electricity works to know this (a functioning brain helps!)
yer, it would go around in the water, but he’s standing on a metal ladder! wouldn’t
that mean that he was going to get electrocuted anyway, even if the electrical current was in the water? cos isnt metal a conductor of electricity?
Sab, in Britain it’s called earthing so think before you type ye? If the breakers on the drill won’t work and the cord in the water shouldn’t matter if its in good condition, but looking at the picture I couldn’t say that was a good possibility
if the pool drain is grounded even if the drill hits the water the current would go to the ground through the shortest path which even if the the ladder is between the drain and the drill would be through the cross support of the ladder which is below the guys feet so no zappy but still stupid
If you think the guy is so stupid…tell me how else you would recommend working on the ceiling above a pool!! Drain 50,000 gallons of water just to change a lightbulb???!?!?!!
PLUS…the drill is CLEARLY running to the bar or whatever it is, so its perfectly plausible that the area he is working on could be shut off and still have the drill work
Ok, I’m going to cover all the comments at once here.
1. BATTERY POWERED DRILL. Duh.
2. There is a strap connecting the drill to the ladder, thus it will not hit the water if it falls.
3. He’s not barefoot, you were right before, rubber soled shoes.
4. If he’s using a drill, he better not be changing a light bulb, but I will admit that draining the pool just for some maintenance is fairly wasteful.
5. What happens to the wood shavings from the hole he drills? Just fall in the water?
1. It’s clearly a corded drill. You can see the drill cord and the extension cord plugged together and hanging from the next to the top rung of the ladd. The extension cord is in the water.
2. That’s the drill cord, not a strap, but he’s probably got the cords secured so neither the drill not the plugs will hit the water if he drops it.
3. It looks like he’s wearing a wader (like what fishermen wear to wade in cold streams). Notice the “waistband” is almost to his armpits. That’s how you get to a ladder in 3 or 4 feet of water and not get soaked.
So the main hazard possibility is that there’s a fault in the drill wiring, making the handle “hot”. such things are no fun to discover when you’re up a ladder over dry ground either, but the hazard is increased by the ladder being apparently aluminum and presumably very well grounded through the water, and the good chance that the guy’s hands are wet. Maybe the wader will keep him from grounding through his feet or belly, but when he puts his other hand on the ladder… And the wader might fail as insulation, too.
And the extension cord apparently draped into the water is another hazard – not much of one while the guy is on the ladder, but if the insulation fails while he’s wading to or from the ladder, the current just might seek him out and find pinholes in the wader.
My opinion of this depends on when this picture was taken. Nowadays, you’re a fool to do this kind of work with anything but cordless tools (or pneumatic so you can leave your electric motor in the compressor on dry land). That drill isn’t big enough to be of a horsepower that requires a cord, and the cord is too thin for good pressure hose. 20 years back, most workers didn’t have cordless tools, so he had to take a few chances, but he could have at least used a fiberglass ladder and looked for a way to hang the extension cord above the water. Go back a few decades further, and your choices in ladders are wood or metal, and I think wood would be an even worse choice for this job, adding the chance of soaked-through wood crumbling under your weight to the electrical hazards.
Sometimes you’ve just got to make sure your cords and tools are in great shape, reduce the risk as much as possible, and get the job done. Especially in the not-so-good old days!
Another thought – is he working on a buddy system? Having a buddy standing by the power socket to plug in the extension cord only when you’re ready to use the drill, and to kill power and initiate a rescue if something goes wrong considerably reduces the risk.
some of these comments are beyond ridiculous… not to mention there are TONS of jobs that are far more dangerous than the tiny amount of danger represented here.
people people, hes in no real danger, i work professionaly with pools… there is a seperate ground for the pool thats used so he wont get shocked… think about it, how do u think we change the light bulbs below the surface of the water without dying? besides that, pool water is actually a very poor conducter of electricity, its much purrer than average water in terms of iron and other elements that make “normal” water more conductive…
Honestly, many of the comments appear to be made without accurately referencing the pic. He is barefoot and wet up past his waist. But I don’t see anywhere where the extension cord is touching the water as some said. However, it definitely does not appear to be the safest way to do the job, but if the drill did hit the water it would more than likely short out and trip the breaker delivering at worst a brief shock.
Of course the electrical thing, but notice how the guy looks wet from his chest down. I think he jumped in the water to ascend up the ladder (instead of stepping on the first rung above water).
wtf. I saw this in our safety training video at work (sans the “FAIL” text). XD
OSHA violation FAIL?
Other than that he appears to be doing electrical work in a pool of water while standing on a metal ladder without anyone holding it, why is it fail?
he’s gonna get fried because he’s not grounded
dipstick, its called sarcasm. FAIL!
EPIC FAIL!!! When working on high/mains voltage stuff, its far safer to be ungrounded. Go ground youself then touch a 33kV line, see what happens, assfucker.
he get zapped if something go wrong.
they showed us this in the oh&s course I did :p
As long as the breaker is off, there is no danger here at all.
Okay, how is the breaker off if he’s using the drill while it’s plugged in?
It might be plugged into a different breaker. lol
comment fail
Looks like there is lots of liquor behind them…might explain a little.
Whats the fail here? Try imagine what happens if he drops his machine…
Electricity + Metal ladder + Water = EPIC FAIL.
Hey, at least he’s wearing safety goggles…
wow, some of you guys are retarded. first off its called grounding not earthing, second of all even if the breaker is off he is still going to get electrocuted if his power cord or drill touches the water, it’s pretty basic really. don’t have to be a rocket scientist to figure that out, just need a functional brain.
If the drill hits the water electrical current will go ground through the water, not the ladder. If he’s on the ladder he’s fine. If he’s in the water he will feel a shock and might get hurt.
He could be at risk as well if he drills in to a live wire (although even then current may go through the drill ground wire).
Otherwise he should be OK. You need training on how electricity works to know this (a functioning brain helps!)
yer, it would go around in the water, but he’s standing on a metal ladder! wouldn’t
that mean that he was going to get electrocuted anyway, even if the electrical current was in the water? cos isnt metal a conductor of electricity?
he won’t get electricuted if his drill falls, ladders have plastic caps on the base for a reason, but yea, what he’s doing is a fail
So the plastic caps on the base help because luckily the feet of the ladder are resting on the surface of the water. Right?
if the breaker is off he’s still going to get electrocuted.. ….because?
it depends where you are, it’s called earthing in nz.
Listen. He WILL get electrocuted.See that drill cord?
Fellas…if the breaker is off, how is the drill on?
just being technical, it looks like he looped the wire on one of the rungs, so if it drops it won’t hit the water.
Sab, in Britain it’s called earthing so think before you type ye? If the breakers on the drill won’t work and the cord in the water shouldn’t matter if its in good condition, but looking at the picture I couldn’t say that was a good possibility
how did he get up and stay dry?
mendy, you serious? he is obviously wet to his waist.
rubber soled shoes, the guys a genius!
oh wait, the guy’s barefoot! i fail!
if the pool drain is grounded even if the drill hits the water the current would go to the ground through the shortest path which even if the the ladder is between the drain and the drill would be through the cross support of the ladder which is below the guys feet so no zappy but still stupid
Yes. If he drops the drill in the pool the current will go through the water to ground, not through him.
He’s in trouble if he drills in to a live wire. Then he’s part of the circuit. So hopefully the breaker is off for whatever he is drilling in to.
Perhaps the name should be grounding fail. Title Fail.
If you think the guy is so stupid…tell me how else you would recommend working on the ceiling above a pool!! Drain 50,000 gallons of water just to change a lightbulb???!?!?!!
Um, how about using a cordless drill?
PLUS…the drill is CLEARLY running to the bar or whatever it is, so its perfectly plausible that the area he is working on could be shut off and still have the drill work
Ok, I’m going to cover all the comments at once here.
1. BATTERY POWERED DRILL. Duh.
2. There is a strap connecting the drill to the ladder, thus it will not hit the water if it falls.
3. He’s not barefoot, you were right before, rubber soled shoes.
4. If he’s using a drill, he better not be changing a light bulb, but I will admit that draining the pool just for some maintenance is fairly wasteful.
5. What happens to the wood shavings from the hole he drills? Just fall in the water?
1. It’s clearly a corded drill. You can see the drill cord and the extension cord plugged together and hanging from the next to the top rung of the ladd. The extension cord is in the water.
2. That’s the drill cord, not a strap, but he’s probably got the cords secured so neither the drill not the plugs will hit the water if he drops it.
3. It looks like he’s wearing a wader (like what fishermen wear to wade in cold streams). Notice the “waistband” is almost to his armpits. That’s how you get to a ladder in 3 or 4 feet of water and not get soaked.
So the main hazard possibility is that there’s a fault in the drill wiring, making the handle “hot”. such things are no fun to discover when you’re up a ladder over dry ground either, but the hazard is increased by the ladder being apparently aluminum and presumably very well grounded through the water, and the good chance that the guy’s hands are wet. Maybe the wader will keep him from grounding through his feet or belly, but when he puts his other hand on the ladder… And the wader might fail as insulation, too.
And the extension cord apparently draped into the water is another hazard – not much of one while the guy is on the ladder, but if the insulation fails while he’s wading to or from the ladder, the current just might seek him out and find pinholes in the wader.
My opinion of this depends on when this picture was taken. Nowadays, you’re a fool to do this kind of work with anything but cordless tools (or pneumatic so you can leave your electric motor in the compressor on dry land). That drill isn’t big enough to be of a horsepower that requires a cord, and the cord is too thin for good pressure hose. 20 years back, most workers didn’t have cordless tools, so he had to take a few chances, but he could have at least used a fiberglass ladder and looked for a way to hang the extension cord above the water. Go back a few decades further, and your choices in ladders are wood or metal, and I think wood would be an even worse choice for this job, adding the chance of soaked-through wood crumbling under your weight to the electrical hazards.
Sometimes you’ve just got to make sure your cords and tools are in great shape, reduce the risk as much as possible, and get the job done. Especially in the not-so-good old days!
Another thought – is he working on a buddy system? Having a buddy standing by the power socket to plug in the extension cord only when you’re ready to use the drill, and to kill power and initiate a rescue if something goes wrong considerably reduces the risk.
some of these comments are beyond ridiculous… not to mention there are TONS of jobs that are far more dangerous than the tiny amount of danger represented here.
people people, hes in no real danger, i work professionaly with pools… there is a seperate ground for the pool thats used so he wont get shocked… think about it, how do u think we change the light bulbs below the surface of the water without dying? besides that, pool water is actually a very poor conducter of electricity, its much purrer than average water in terms of iron and other elements that make “normal” water more conductive…
Honestly, many of the comments appear to be made without accurately referencing the pic. He is barefoot and wet up past his waist. But I don’t see anywhere where the extension cord is touching the water as some said. However, it definitely does not appear to be the safest way to do the job, but if the drill did hit the water it would more than likely short out and trip the breaker delivering at worst a brief shock.
there’s really only one way to tell if he would get shocked…
the title is a fail! it’s not called being earthed it grounded!!!
Of course the electrical thing, but notice how the guy looks wet from his chest down. I think he jumped in the water to ascend up the ladder (instead of stepping on the first rung above water).
zap! what a fail