How Many Stupid Deaths from Electrocutions in Cambodia ?
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How Many Stupid Deaths from Electrocutions in Cambodia ?
Many people die every day in Cambodia from electric shocks.
RIP
Cambodia News (Phnom Penh): At 8:00 pm on November 24, 2021, in Choam Chao 1, Khan Por Senchey, an unidentified young man was electrocuted and died instantly.
Unfortunately, the cause of the electrocution has not been determined.
RIP
Cambodia News (Phnom Penh): At 8:00 pm on November 24, 2021, in Choam Chao 1, Khan Por Senchey, an unidentified young man was electrocuted and died instantly.
Unfortunately, the cause of the electrocution has not been determined.
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Re: How Many Stupid Deaths from Electrocutions in Cambodia ?
It has always "shocked me" how cavalier Cambodians are with electricity. I have seen things at our company that even if you have no education there should have been some common sense learned in life to keep you from doing very risky decisions with electricity. Yes, there are many avoidable unbelievable electrocutions in Cambodia especially at construction sites (metal ladder placed on high voltage electric wires) but I wonder even more how many fires are started based on just plain bad decisions? Fortunately after 10 years we have not had any serious incidents with our staff but it is not because they haven't tried.
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How Many Stupid Deaths from Electrocutions in Cambodia ?
It’s funny that this thread comes up today, after the shennanigans last night and today….
Our lights started flickering again last night, as they do during heavy rain and thunderstorms. (Except it wasn’t raining)
And then it went dark.
The neighbours were talking about fire and stuff, but given that Cambodians insist on using the same word for different, and mutually incompatible effects, it’s hard to establish whether Bat Phleung is good or bad, on or off, or just a statement that one should run away. I’ve never heard anyone use the actual word for electricity.
អគ្គិសនី
Akkisani
Even EDC electricians this morning kept yelling
Bat phleung (turn off)
Bat phleung (turn on)
Bat phleung, bat phleung (turn it off again, I think….)
That’s the guy upstairs yelling to the guy down stairs to turn the main breaker on or off (or maybe just changing the state from whatever it is now, to the other option)
Two photos coming…
The cause of our issues, melted terminal blocks on the incoming supply, then taped, then taped together, but sat in what is a serious overflow from the gutters during heavy rain.
This
EDC electrician. Fixed. He’s cut the old terminal block out, twisted the wires together, taped them up, kept them separate.
A well deserved pat on the back for job well fucking done. Chat for twice as long as it took to fix the problem, and then fucked off.
I’m now informed that everything is ok. But if we have any more problems, they can do a better perfect job if someone pays…
Stalemate.
We’ve been having issues for a while, now, and the main breaker is downstairs, accessible by the landlady. The same landlady who left her wok cooking, and we woke up one night to an apartment full of smoke. Her cooking area is right next to her clothes drying area. (Previous fire averted!)
The main breaker usually trips. It’s lower rated than our upstairs breaker which is 20A.
Try explaining to a local electrician what amps and volts are!
Our lights started flickering again last night, as they do during heavy rain and thunderstorms. (Except it wasn’t raining)
And then it went dark.
The neighbours were talking about fire and stuff, but given that Cambodians insist on using the same word for different, and mutually incompatible effects, it’s hard to establish whether Bat Phleung is good or bad, on or off, or just a statement that one should run away. I’ve never heard anyone use the actual word for electricity.
អគ្គិសនី
Akkisani
Even EDC electricians this morning kept yelling
Bat phleung (turn off)
Bat phleung (turn on)
Bat phleung, bat phleung (turn it off again, I think….)
That’s the guy upstairs yelling to the guy down stairs to turn the main breaker on or off (or maybe just changing the state from whatever it is now, to the other option)
Two photos coming…
The cause of our issues, melted terminal blocks on the incoming supply, then taped, then taped together, but sat in what is a serious overflow from the gutters during heavy rain.
This
EDC electrician. Fixed. He’s cut the old terminal block out, twisted the wires together, taped them up, kept them separate.
A well deserved pat on the back for job well fucking done. Chat for twice as long as it took to fix the problem, and then fucked off.
I’m now informed that everything is ok. But if we have any more problems, they can do a better perfect job if someone pays…
Stalemate.
We’ve been having issues for a while, now, and the main breaker is downstairs, accessible by the landlady. The same landlady who left her wok cooking, and we woke up one night to an apartment full of smoke. Her cooking area is right next to her clothes drying area. (Previous fire averted!)
The main breaker usually trips. It’s lower rated than our upstairs breaker which is 20A.
Try explaining to a local electrician what amps and volts are!
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Re: How Many Stupid Deaths from Electrocutions in Cambodia ?
Cavalier is definitely the most appropriate term.cambo swa wrote: ↑Fri Nov 26, 2021 5:31 am It has always "shocked me" how cavalier Cambodians are with electricity. I have seen things at our company that even if you have no education there should have been some common sense learned in life to keep you from doing very risky decisions with electricity. Yes, there are many avoidable unbelievable electrocutions in Cambodia especially at construction sites (metal ladder placed on high voltage electric wires) but I wonder even more how many fires are started based on just plain bad decisions? Fortunately after 10 years we have not had any serious incidents with our staff but it is not because they haven't tried.
- Jerry Atrick
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Re: How Many Stupid Deaths from Electrocutions in Cambodia ?
I've been fortunate enough to work with many of the best trained electricians and electrical engineers in this country for yearsFreightdog wrote: ↑Fri Nov 26, 2021 12:01 pm
Try explaining to a local electrician what amps and volts are!
"Caan gizinee" save the day quite often
Anyhow the fuxktards twisting wires together in our houses when shit goes wrong aren't electricians. They are just chancers with some basic knowhow and a cheaper proxy than losing ones own life fucking with another's mess of bad wiring
The real guys are busy working with full osha rules and making four figure monthly salaries with benefits and don't need to bother with domestic electricity nightmares or nonsense
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Re: How Many Stupid Deaths from Electrocutions in Cambodia ?
An Englishman i know sent an uneducated kid into his leaky boat with an electric drill in my town one day.
He forgot to explain the water thing.
RIP kid.
He forgot to explain the water thing.
RIP kid.
- Freightdog
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Re: How Many Stupid Deaths from Electrocutions in Cambodia ?
What gets me is that these guys were in EDC uniforms, with EDC vehicle. Blatant…..Jerry Atrick wrote: ↑Fri Nov 26, 2021 1:23 pmI've been fortunate enough to work with many of the best trained electricians and electrical engineers in this country for yearsFreightdog wrote: ↑Fri Nov 26, 2021 12:01 pm
Try explaining to a local electrician what amps and volts are!
"Caan gizinee" save the day quite often
Anyhow the fuxktards twisting wires together in our houses when shit goes wrong aren't electricians. They are just chancers with some basic knowhow and a cheaper proxy than losing ones own life fucking with another's mess of bad wiring
The real guys are busy working with full osha rules and making four figure monthly salaries with benefits and don't need to bother with domestic electricity nightmares or nonsense
Does anyone have a decent domestic electrician they can recommend?
- John Bingham
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Re: How Many Stupid Deaths from Electrocutions in Cambodia ?
There was a German woman here way back who was fixing up a premises to open a bar/ restaurant. It was the same building that later became the Gym Bar. I can't remember the exact details, but I think she had her feet soaking in a basin of warm water and accidentally dropped a power tool in. Anyway she was electrocuted.
Silence, exile, and cunning.
Re: How Many Stupid Deaths from Electrocutions in Cambodia ?
Stupid is as stupid does
Local communes could easily have training classes for free about proper safety protocols when dealing with electricity, I 1000% believe that would work extremely well in province.
Local communes could easily have training classes for free about proper safety protocols when dealing with electricity, I 1000% believe that would work extremely well in province.
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