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	07-31-2007, 12:58 PM #1 Wiring looks likes like a snake nest! Wiring looks likes like a snake nest!Local Electrical guru Wayne Rogers sent this photo out today. I thought you guys would get a charge out of it! 
 
 Not exactly what I am generally worried about when I pull a dead front. 
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	07-31-2007, 01:46 PM #2 Re: Wiring looks likes like a snake nest! Re: Wiring looks likes like a snake nest!Without looking any further, I would feel safe writing up "raceway riser from underground lateral is not sealed as required".   
 
 Unless, maybe, those things could open the cover?? 
 
 
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	07-31-2007, 01:50 PM #3 Re: Wiring looks likes like a snake nest! Re: Wiring looks likes like a snake nest!Apparent biological organisms present in equipment enclosure. Recommend jumping backwards involuntarily and shouting bad words. 
 "There is no exception to the rule that every rule has an exception." -James Thurber, writer and cartoonist (1894-1961)
 www.ArnoldHomeInspections.com
 
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	07-31-2007, 01:58 PM #4 Re: Wiring looks likes like a snake nest! Re: Wiring looks likes like a snake nest!INSPECTION HAS BEEN TEMPORARY DELAYED! 
 
 Inspector has gone Home to get clean jeans. 
 
 
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	07-31-2007, 02:38 PM #5
 
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	07-31-2007, 04:04 PM #6 Re: Wiring looks likes like a snake nest! Re: Wiring looks likes like a snake nest!Is that copperhead wiring? 
 "Baseball is like church. Many attend but few understand." Leo Durocher
 Bruce Breedlove
 www.avaloninspection.com
 
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	08-01-2007, 03:24 AM #7 Re: Wiring looks likes like a snake nest! Re: Wiring looks likes like a snake nest!we call those poisonous critters 
 
 Cottonmouths
 
 Agkistrodon piscivorous
 The Latin name piscivorous means 'fish eating,' indicating its dietary characteristics. Also known as 'water moccasins', only one recognized subspecies is found in Texas; Western cottonmouth (A.p. leucostoma). Cottonmouths can be dark brown, olive-brown, olive green or almost solid black. They are marked with wide, dark bands, which are more distinct in some individuals than in others. Juvenile snakes are more brilliantly marked. The cottonmouth gets its name from the white tissue inside its mouth, which it displays when threatened. This heavy-bodied snake, which averages about 3-1/2 feet in length, is found over the eastern half of the state in swamps and sluggish waterways, coastal marshes, rivers, ponds and streams.
 badair http://www.adairinspection.com Garland, TX 75042
 Commercial-Residential-Construction-EIFS-Stucco-ACMV-Infrared Thermography
 life is the random lottery of events followed by numerous narrow escapes...accept the good
 


 
 
					
					
 
				
				
				
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					 Originally Posted by Bruce Breedlove
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