added later: Zooza's most elegant solution here. Well worth checking out.
As I mentioned, we need to re-wire. We have, at most, three outlets in the basement.
This is one of them:
The black cords are connected to our television cable--which we do not currently have hooked up. The wire coiled on the hook is from a tremendously long extension cord for the phone that went all the way up the stairs to the bedroom. We pulled it up, but left it here.
You can see that I have a power bar plugged into the outlet. It's over to the right, just propped up on some nails.
From here, I have a fax machine and a light plugged in: but the cord for the light (an extension cord) goes UP to the rafters and OVER the ducting and down the other side. Like this:
(I took each picture facing the ducting, that's why it looks so wonky in the middle.) Having it go UP and OVER is a new thing: it used to hang below and catch in my hair. But it still needs taming. (PS. Using those small pipes to hook things onto is a no-no. They're natural gas pipes. I had an empty coat hanger slung over one of them once and got a BIG lecture from a furnace guy. So, they're of no help at all.)
There are phone cords here:
(For future reference, those square thingys are phone jacks. For land lines. Only the top one currently works. It's connected with a cord to the REAL phone jack (somewhere else, I don't know where) which then connects us to the outside world.
And then there is this.
I love this:
I'm not sure there's anything we can or should do to this. And the long green wire, bisecting the photo? What's that you ask? I have no idea. Those coloured wires don't actually go anywhere: they just hang there in all their spidery glory.
Thanks, Zooza. I hope your idea will work for at least ONE of these monsters.
Monday, March 24, 2008
Cord Issues: For Zooza
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
3 comments :
Thanks, Alana - I have just posted my possible solution for you on my blog.
wow! I wonder if you've had someone (electrician or inspector) come out to look at these? I would certainly think about slowly weeding out the unnecessary or disfunctional- if only one of those phone lines is your phone line, why not just remove and toss the others? I'm just a bit scared of all that jerryrigged electricity in the basement being a fire hazard for you...
Not to worry, Colleen. Really. It's all temporary. When we have the house re-wired, everything will be taken care of properly.
Post a Comment