Thanks for the video. Can the cutout be closed while the line is still hot or must it be de-energized first? For example, say a cutout on the primary side of a step-down transformer serving a residential customer. Thanks again.
I find these types of videos facinating , it is something that will never apply to me directly . BUT if anyone points to a fuse cutout and ask what the hell is that thing . Damn I,m gonna look smart .
Thanks for the video. Can the cutout be closed while the line is still hot or must it be de-energized first? For example, say a cutout on the primary side of a step-down transformer serving a residential customer. Thanks again.
I work in nyc and we don't de energize.
To be more clear, one side of the cut out will be hot while it's open and once you close the cutout it'll liven up the other end
It usually doesn’t matter.
Nice description 👌
Hi! Could you let me know if it often happens that the fuse holder remains stuck (locked) after the link breaks?
Yes confirmed had one do it today
Not every time but it does happen
Howmuch the price
I find these types of videos facinating , it is something that will never apply to me directly . BUT if anyone points to a fuse cutout and ask what the hell is that thing . Damn I,m gonna look smart .
thanks
អរគុណthak👏
👍👍🇮🇩
flat top switch ....we quit using tthem after problems with them ...