DEATH wrote:False dilemma.
It's taking the (increased) chance that accidents will kill good men. Faulty wiring exists all over the world to a degree, it's not a certain death trap.
It would be a false dilemma to say
"Either this case of faulty wiring can be fixed and people won't die, or it can be left alone and people will die".
It's not a false dilemma to say
"Either this case of faulty wiring can be fixed and people CAN'T die, or it can be left alone and people CAN die".
An engineer who designs a faulty bridge that collapses can't say
'It's not my fault because it wasn't certain death, just an increased chance of failure. It would have cost too much to eliminate that flaw'.
OK, now I'm not a electrician, but it seems like the only way someone can be killed by their shower is if there's a potential difference between the shower head and the drain hole. Water on -> circuit closed. Consider this:
- Take a length of insulated cable, strip the ends.
- Weld one end to the base of the shower head.
- Run it along and down the wall and across to the drain hole.
- Weld the other end to the drain hole.
- Seal it over with silastic or whatever (and maybe spraypaint it).
Now I've gathered from this thread that Shep's an electrician. Shep, does that sound like a reasonable hypothesis and solution? How long would such a job take for someone of your skill level?