Yes, you can purchase replacement plugs at a local hardware store
The power supply is probably defective. If it isn't a year old, they will fix or replace it at no charge.
Under a sliding cover on the plug body. Or: press the spades together to withdraw the plug from the body, sometimes fuses are hidden there. Or: one of the lamps is actually a fuse and is not a lamp.
Check the plug-in for the trailer lights, if it has one. If not, check the Headlight switch. It probably has a burnt wire.
there is only one coil of you are getting power to it but no spark replace it
sounds like a short circuit in trailer plug or wires to it?
You plug it in your plug outlet
Some string of lights have a plug on one end. If it has prongs, then this is the plug which goes into the wall outlet. The other end of the string of lights has another plug on the other end. This end plug has no prongs. However it has holes for you to stick another string of lights of the same type on to. You can keep adding on lights to each end. The male plug goes into the female receptor end. Do not over load with too many attachments. Merry Christmas
Buy Christmas lights, plug them into a wall, then wrap them around your guitar. You may also plug them into a generator.
Yes They Sell A TEN set of Christmas Lights. They are battery powered not plug in lights. They also sell clip lights/socket cords candelabra base if you want to make something cool
You have to get an extension cord and plug them into it and then plug the extension cord somewhere in your house, if you do not have some type of outdoor outlet. You might try to get the extension cord through a window and then close the window as much as possible.
Plug the "string of lights" into the power point. If a particular light does not come on, then it is "bad".
1/15
Try and unplug them and plug them back in again If that doesn't work you will have to take them off the tree and get a new box of lights...
You can put one end at the top and spin the lights around and around the tree until the tree is covered in lights. Then you plug in the end at the bottom!
== == most off the time it is the fuses. they are in the plug most have 2 slots that slid out where the fuse are located just replace the fuses and that should take care of your problem. however 90% of the time this is not the issue.
You might be overloading the circuit. What else is drawing power on that circuit or phase? Are your lights really OK or is there a short somewhere?.
It depends on what type of Christmas lights. If they are the (now) standard 50 , 100, 150, mini-lights, they use a 3A fuse and you COULD use a MAXIMUM of about 750 lights if they are strung together from one string (end to end plugs) before blowing the fuse built into the plug of the first light set. If you plug them into separate outlets (or into an outlet-strip), then you could light about 3750 lights on a (otherwidse unused) 15 A household circuit. With the new LED type Christmas lights, it might be even more.