How to Change a Broken Light Bulb with a Potato

The history of the incandescent light bulb is an interesting one that has contributed wonderful things to our society today. Who among us would relish living in a world without it? But, as with any great invention, there is a down side, and one draw back to having light bulbs to add
 brilliance to our life is having to change them when they burn out and break. The day something is invented that gives permanent or 100 year illumination will be a happy one for many of us, indeed.

It can be a nuisance to change a light bulb when it burns out. But it can be dangerous to change one when the bulb is broken and still in the socket. There is a relatively safe and easy method for doing it, and it involves using a potato. I know this because I have done it, myself.

I read somewhere that you could change a broken light bulb with a potato. I tried it and discovered a few things that were not covered in what I read. There were problems and dangers I ran into which I wish I had been warned about beforehand.

The following is my version of how to change a broken light bulb with a potato, including tips and warnings, based upon my own experiences.

What You Need:

1 raw potato
1 knife
1 replacement light bulb
1 bag for trash/glass shards
Gloves
Protective eyewear
Vacuum/sweeper and a dustpan
Recipe using the remaining half a potato is optional

IMPORTANT: Read all the directions before trying this!

What to Do:

1- Using the knife, cut the raw potato in half (not lengthwise). You only need one of the halves. Reserve the other half for your recipe, or throw away.

2- Put on your gloves and protective eyewear.

3- Turn off the power to the light. If it is a lamp, unplug it. You may turn off power to it at the circuit breaker, as well.

4- If it is an overhead light, and you have an assistant, have them hold the bag up closely to the light as you work to catch any shards of glass that may break/fly off. For a lamp, if you can place it in the bag to catch remnant of glass it is wonderful. If not, you will need to carefully clean the area once you are done.

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hi

Posted on 02/03/2009 at 3:02:05 PM

I don't think u need a potato....since power been cut off...just get a really good glove..that for heavy duty so you don't get cut by the glass then u are fine w/ safty then put on the eyes wear to prevent broken piece of glasses fallen into ur eyes... US voltage = 120V, Europe Volt = 220V..note voltage do not kill u as much as the current it carry will kill u...so be on the safe side turn off the power supply and wear a rubber shoes..so either static charge or any voltage do not shock u cuz rubber shoes help so u do not get grounded. If u not grounded then the circuit is open thus it doesn't harm u..Either way..no need to potato here is pretty simple..

Posted on 09/11/2008 at 8:09:27 AM

I tried this and it worked! Old broken bulb is out, new unbroken bulb is in and my eyes are fine! Unfortunately little shards of glass got into my assistant's eyes and she had to be rushed to the hospital. For future reference, I suggest that you provide your assistant with protective eyewear too.

Posted on 11/10/2007 at 9:11:00 PM

enough already about bulbs. love the environment. use CFLs.

Posted on 11/09/2007 at 5:11:00 PM

Worked for me on regular bulbs, but recently tried it on a recessed bulb that had broken in my ceiling I now have gnocci's over my head.

Posted on 11/09/2007 at 2:11:00 PM

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