Cord Caution

Yesterday I bought a reel to store my 100′ extension cord. Until yesterday, it had been sitting in a less-than-neat pile. But now it is organized.

While I was setting up the cord reel, I noticed a warning on the label. It said to unroll the cord before use.  I initially thought “why bother with that?” Isn’t the point of the reel to keep the cord in a nice coil? Why not let it stay coiled, like the garden hose does? It doesn’t complain at all. Then the lessons of how to make an electromagnet came to mind, and I thought there might be something to it.

There is some argument about whether it is induction causing the issue or just the normal heat associated with voltage drop for such a long wire. Normally the heat would be able to dissipate along the surface area of the cord. With the cord wound tightly however, there is much less surface area. Normal household loads for a moderate time should not cause any problems. But I would still be careful not to let any metal go into the core of the cord reel.

“He covers {His} hands with the lightning, And commands it to strike the mark.”
– Job 36:32

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This little article thingy was written by Some Guy sometime around 10:02 pm and has been carefully placed in the Fun category.

2 Responses to “Cord Caution”

  1. Buckley Says:

    So what is the risk? The coil getting too hot and becoming a fire hazzard? The coil magnetizing any suitable metal object in the coil? Or said metal object getting hot and becoming a potential burn hazzard should one pick up the metal object?

  2. Some Guy Says:

    Probably the risk is that the cord would overheat and melt. But I’ll let you know if I ever try it.

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