Shocking is not useful response for a broken pool thermometer.
Most pool thermometers are electronic sensors or bimetallic strips, which won't put anything into the pool if they break, or are based on colored alcohol, for which shocking will not do anything.
If your broken thermometer used Mercury (unlikely) it will settle to the bottom and into the drain traps. You need to get the mercury out of the drains.
Out of the hands of children, in a place protected from mechanical shock and away from extremes of temperature that could exceed the range of the thermometer.
The glass in a bulb of a thermometer is typically very thin, around 0.5-1 millimeter thick. This thinness allows for efficient heat transfer from the measurement area to the thermometer sensor. The glass is also often chemically treated to make it more resistant to thermal shock and breakage.
The electric shock will probably bang you right in the kitty
There should be a diagram on the right shock tower.
After the shock, the AED will either say that another shock is advised or to continue CPR.
Fling the boss at the right hand speaker until it breaks. Then you can hold the boss up to the speaker and he gets stuck on it as it electrocutes him. Not sure if the left hand speaker will do the same thing or not.
mabye they "absorb shock!" 2nd Answer: In actual fact, shock absorbers do not absorb shock: the springs do that. The "shock absorbers" dampen rebound (Bouncing). In a bike, the spring is built right around the dampener part.
It is located near the right shock tower - the cap should be marked with an "L".
Yes you should use a AED on a person that has a electrical shock injury.
To prevent electrical shock, you should connect the ground wire first.
If you are not clear, the AED could shock you as well.
Because they are striped