Engineering:Brinkley stick
From HandWiki
A Brinkley stick is a safety device used to discharge high voltage capacitors and ensure HT (high voltage) electrical circuits are discharged. The tool consists of a hook attached to the end of an insulated rod. The hook is connected by a length of insulated wire to a suitable ground or earth, often via a suitably valued resistor. Named after Charles Brinkley, an amputee ferry boatman who carried radar staff across the river Deben. [1]
One of the Trade test colour films, On the Safe Side[2] includes a fictionalised sequence during which the life of a technician is preserved by his decision to deploy a Brinkley stick.
References
- ↑ "RAF Bawdsey". Dick Barrett. 2008–2011. http://www.radarpages.co.uk/oral/dbarrett/bawdsey2.htm. Retrieved 2007-02-28. ""What did you do in the "Cold War" Dad?", Part 2 - Master Radar Station"
- ↑ Ronald H. Riley & Associates (Producer), Rodney Giesler (Writer), Frank North (Photographer), Sheila Willson (Editor), Francis Rodker & Geoff Loynes (Animators), David Smart (Technical Advisor), Lawrence Crabb (Director) (1967). On the Safe SIDE (Motion picture). UK: UKAEA. Event occurs at 17 minutes in. Retrieved 2022-05-11.
Better be sure before I touch anything.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brinkley stick.
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