Bulb blown, perhaps?
flexible strand of metal = wire
Pregnant camels
you clamp the end of the strand of hair and wrap the strand around the iron. hold it there and pull downwards and slowly unclamp to release
1/10 of a gram
Assuming that all strands are vertical/ parallel to gravity and equally spaced (on a radius) around the centre of gravity then tension on each strand will be equivalent to weight x 9.81 divided by 7 equals tension in Newtons. If the strands are not normal and/or at varying distances from centre of gravity then it becomes a little more complicated. Summ of tension on strands must equal weight of bag. Tension on each strand is a ratio of it's distance from the COG of the furthest most strand. Don't forget the further from perpendicular a strand is the more tension on the strand.
Using christmas lights for halloween is somewhat confusing to me. What comes to mind is maybe placing all orange bulbs in a strand of christmas lights to make them halloween lights.
The LightKeeper Pro is a way to repair lights on a strand. It is most commonly used for Christmas lights and other small sets of lights. This can save money by not buying a whole new strand.
Probably because you brought them cheap or the bulbs are broken.
LED lights are better depending on what you want. Unlike traditional lights, if one goes out, the whole strand (or half a strand) doesn't go out. In that way they're good. The only bad thing, though, is that they do not yet come in as many colors as traditional ones do.
Thomas Edison Thomas Edison, the inventor of the first successful practical light bulb, created the very first strand of electric lights. During the Christmas season of 1880, these strands were strung around the outside of his Menlo Park Laboratory
Keith Strand has written: 'Grandfather's Christmas Tree' -- subject(s): Fiction, Geese, Christmas, Frontier and pioneer life
Are they plugged in? if so check each light and see if you can find a burnt out light bulb sometimes this is the problem. Also the new ones have a fuse in the or near the plug check to see if yours has one and if the fuse is bad.
It is very simple to repair a color changing LED light on a strand of Christmas lights. You simply pull the damaged light out of the socket and replace it with a new one.
Actually shortening a strand of Christmas lights is not advisable or safe. If they do not work, they need to be replaced. If the strands are too long for your need, you can try creative ways of arranging the lights to get them to "fit." Do not ever attempt to modify the strands by actually shortening them, though. Having someone get electrocuted or a house catch on fire is never a good thing, and it is even worse during the holidays.
HELL NO! I've been looking all over fir the kind that "lock" because I have 50 ornaments that only plug into that type of light strand and I don't have any!!
Today =)
If you have used several strands of lights, make sure the plugs are plugged in securely. If the plugs are plugged in, check the bulbs. With some types of lights, if one bulb is burned out, left out, or loose, the entire strand will not light. If the bulbs are all working, it is probably time to buy a new strand of lights.