happy_Alex
Happiness set to 11
Below are two lightbulb types. One has the bayonet cap attachment type found in the UK and the other the screw thread found on the continent. Which is most practical?
On the face of it the bayonet cap is easier to fix, you just push and turn, and hey presto! it's in. But just think for a minute, one has to hold the socket while you push making two hands necessary to complete the job, whereas screwing a bulb in can be done single handed - in my experience.
But there is another side to the coin, as there always is. I have found that hanging screw capped light bulbs can slowly, possibly by the force of gravity, work themselves loose. This has two possible ramifications. Firstly one has to re-tighten the lightbulb. Secondly, if the cap between the contact of the bulb and the live terminal becomes sufficient, the current could arc when the lightbulb is switched on. This combined with a gas-leak or other combustable vapour could result in a lethal explosion.
On the face of it the bayonet cap is easier to fix, you just push and turn, and hey presto! it's in. But just think for a minute, one has to hold the socket while you push making two hands necessary to complete the job, whereas screwing a bulb in can be done single handed - in my experience.
But there is another side to the coin, as there always is. I have found that hanging screw capped light bulbs can slowly, possibly by the force of gravity, work themselves loose. This has two possible ramifications. Firstly one has to re-tighten the lightbulb. Secondly, if the cap between the contact of the bulb and the live terminal becomes sufficient, the current could arc when the lightbulb is switched on. This combined with a gas-leak or other combustable vapour could result in a lethal explosion.