Why one should not leave fingerprints on bulbs and plugs?












12















I have read that one should not leave greasy fingerprints on their spark plugs or on their light bulbs. Why is this a thing? On what else one should not leave fingerprints? How does one avoid leaving fingerprints (latex gloves or cleaning say the light bulb after putting it in)? How do you clean your fingerprints if you leave any?










share|improve this question




















  • 3





    What else should one not leave finger prints on? Wow, it's a pretty extensive list, but I'd say bank vaults and murder victims unless you had a pretty good justification for why they were left there. A lawyer might have a more comprehensive list! And one that amuses the geek in me: high vacuum equipment. Finger grease outgasses, and with scientific grade vacuums, that can actually slow the process of pumping it down because you create a gassious atmosphere of fingerprint that takes forever to finally pump out.

    – Cort Ammon
    yesterday






  • 3





    @CortAmmon Please clarify. Do you mean that one should sand down the fingertips of the person one has just murdered, or that one should avoid leaving one's own prints on them? I, er, ... my friend -- definitely my friend -- needs to know this. Quite urgently, actually.

    – David Richerby
    yesterday
















12















I have read that one should not leave greasy fingerprints on their spark plugs or on their light bulbs. Why is this a thing? On what else one should not leave fingerprints? How does one avoid leaving fingerprints (latex gloves or cleaning say the light bulb after putting it in)? How do you clean your fingerprints if you leave any?










share|improve this question




















  • 3





    What else should one not leave finger prints on? Wow, it's a pretty extensive list, but I'd say bank vaults and murder victims unless you had a pretty good justification for why they were left there. A lawyer might have a more comprehensive list! And one that amuses the geek in me: high vacuum equipment. Finger grease outgasses, and with scientific grade vacuums, that can actually slow the process of pumping it down because you create a gassious atmosphere of fingerprint that takes forever to finally pump out.

    – Cort Ammon
    yesterday






  • 3





    @CortAmmon Please clarify. Do you mean that one should sand down the fingertips of the person one has just murdered, or that one should avoid leaving one's own prints on them? I, er, ... my friend -- definitely my friend -- needs to know this. Quite urgently, actually.

    – David Richerby
    yesterday














12












12








12


1






I have read that one should not leave greasy fingerprints on their spark plugs or on their light bulbs. Why is this a thing? On what else one should not leave fingerprints? How does one avoid leaving fingerprints (latex gloves or cleaning say the light bulb after putting it in)? How do you clean your fingerprints if you leave any?










share|improve this question
















I have read that one should not leave greasy fingerprints on their spark plugs or on their light bulbs. Why is this a thing? On what else one should not leave fingerprints? How does one avoid leaving fingerprints (latex gloves or cleaning say the light bulb after putting it in)? How do you clean your fingerprints if you leave any?







sparkplugs lights






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday









mike65535

6151317




6151317










asked yesterday









Baran ZadeogluBaran Zadeoglu

135111




135111








  • 3





    What else should one not leave finger prints on? Wow, it's a pretty extensive list, but I'd say bank vaults and murder victims unless you had a pretty good justification for why they were left there. A lawyer might have a more comprehensive list! And one that amuses the geek in me: high vacuum equipment. Finger grease outgasses, and with scientific grade vacuums, that can actually slow the process of pumping it down because you create a gassious atmosphere of fingerprint that takes forever to finally pump out.

    – Cort Ammon
    yesterday






  • 3





    @CortAmmon Please clarify. Do you mean that one should sand down the fingertips of the person one has just murdered, or that one should avoid leaving one's own prints on them? I, er, ... my friend -- definitely my friend -- needs to know this. Quite urgently, actually.

    – David Richerby
    yesterday














  • 3





    What else should one not leave finger prints on? Wow, it's a pretty extensive list, but I'd say bank vaults and murder victims unless you had a pretty good justification for why they were left there. A lawyer might have a more comprehensive list! And one that amuses the geek in me: high vacuum equipment. Finger grease outgasses, and with scientific grade vacuums, that can actually slow the process of pumping it down because you create a gassious atmosphere of fingerprint that takes forever to finally pump out.

    – Cort Ammon
    yesterday






  • 3





    @CortAmmon Please clarify. Do you mean that one should sand down the fingertips of the person one has just murdered, or that one should avoid leaving one's own prints on them? I, er, ... my friend -- definitely my friend -- needs to know this. Quite urgently, actually.

    – David Richerby
    yesterday








3




3





What else should one not leave finger prints on? Wow, it's a pretty extensive list, but I'd say bank vaults and murder victims unless you had a pretty good justification for why they were left there. A lawyer might have a more comprehensive list! And one that amuses the geek in me: high vacuum equipment. Finger grease outgasses, and with scientific grade vacuums, that can actually slow the process of pumping it down because you create a gassious atmosphere of fingerprint that takes forever to finally pump out.

– Cort Ammon
yesterday





What else should one not leave finger prints on? Wow, it's a pretty extensive list, but I'd say bank vaults and murder victims unless you had a pretty good justification for why they were left there. A lawyer might have a more comprehensive list! And one that amuses the geek in me: high vacuum equipment. Finger grease outgasses, and with scientific grade vacuums, that can actually slow the process of pumping it down because you create a gassious atmosphere of fingerprint that takes forever to finally pump out.

– Cort Ammon
yesterday




3




3





@CortAmmon Please clarify. Do you mean that one should sand down the fingertips of the person one has just murdered, or that one should avoid leaving one's own prints on them? I, er, ... my friend -- definitely my friend -- needs to know this. Quite urgently, actually.

– David Richerby
yesterday





@CortAmmon Please clarify. Do you mean that one should sand down the fingertips of the person one has just murdered, or that one should avoid leaving one's own prints on them? I, er, ... my friend -- definitely my friend -- needs to know this. Quite urgently, actually.

– David Richerby
yesterday










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















17















Why is this a thing?




For bulbs it is - spark plugs don't care. The problem with getting fingerprints on bulbs (specifically halogen-type bulbs) is actually the grease that gets left behind - the bulb will get quite hot when lit and grease on a portion of the bulb will cause differences in the rate of heating on the bulb surface and thanks to the way materials expand when heated this means you get different parts of the bulb expanding at different rates and... crack.



Where the bulbs are made from quartz glass (such as in certain more powerful bulbs from some manufacturers) there is also the issue of devitrification - where the oils/salts left behind in the finger print can potentially cause the material to weaken although typically car bulbs aren't going to get hot enough for this to occur although some fogging of the glass may occur.




On what else one should not leave finger prints?




Probably a bit broad to answer here I'm afraid.




How does one avoid leaving finger prints (latex gloves or cleaning say the light bulb after putting it in)?




Yep clean latex gloves (cotton gloves are even better if you have them - but latex or nitrile works just fine) or a holding the bulb in a clean cloth works.




How do you clean your finger prints if you leave any?




You can clean them afterwards as well, a good wipe down with a clean microfibre cloth will do the job.






share|improve this answer





















  • 4





    If you don't have glove or a clean cloth, a paper towel works good as well. The ultimate here would be to use cotton gloves, but they aren't nearly as prevalent as latex or nitrile gloves are.

    – Pᴀᴜʟsᴛᴇʀ2
    yesterday











  • Clean halogen lights using a glass cleaner, make sure it's dry before you turn it on, that should only take a minute.

    – GdD
    yesterday






  • 1





    Rubbing alcohol works well if you have touched the bulb.

    – David Watson
    yesterday






  • 1





    @GdD once the glass part of the bulb is inside the headlight unit then removing the foam cover from the glass will be challenging... I have always managed to get halogen bulbs fitted by just holding the metal or plastic parts...

    – Solar Mike
    yesterday






  • 1





    It depends on the car I guess @SolarMike.

    – GdD
    yesterday



















5














Fingerprints on spark plugs aren't a thing, the natural oils on your skin won't affect their operation. If, however, your fingers are covered in car grease or dirt when you handle the plugs then that can cause issues, either interfering with the electrode or the cable connection to the plug terminal.



If you foul the plugs with dirt or grease then clean them before use. Any dirt on the electrode is going to end up in your cylinder!



For halogen lights @Motosubatsu's answer is pretty comprehensive, I would only add to be careful if handling with facial tissues (i.e. Kleenex), which some people do. Some types of tissues have been treated with moisturizers which will contaminate the bulb and cause the same issues as fingerprints. Toilet tissue generally doesn't, neither do paper towels.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    I would say even tissues without moisturizers would be a bad idea. The oils from your fingers would probably go right through a normal tissue

    – Aethenosity
    yesterday













  • I tend to use the cardboard box the lamp came in. I figure its clean enough for the lamp's glass for transit - its clean enough for the install. Yet another reason why plastic blister packaging sucks.

    – Criggie
    3 hours ago











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "224"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});

function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});


}
});














draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmechanics.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f64583%2fwhy-one-should-not-leave-fingerprints-on-bulbs-and-plugs%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









17















Why is this a thing?




For bulbs it is - spark plugs don't care. The problem with getting fingerprints on bulbs (specifically halogen-type bulbs) is actually the grease that gets left behind - the bulb will get quite hot when lit and grease on a portion of the bulb will cause differences in the rate of heating on the bulb surface and thanks to the way materials expand when heated this means you get different parts of the bulb expanding at different rates and... crack.



Where the bulbs are made from quartz glass (such as in certain more powerful bulbs from some manufacturers) there is also the issue of devitrification - where the oils/salts left behind in the finger print can potentially cause the material to weaken although typically car bulbs aren't going to get hot enough for this to occur although some fogging of the glass may occur.




On what else one should not leave finger prints?




Probably a bit broad to answer here I'm afraid.




How does one avoid leaving finger prints (latex gloves or cleaning say the light bulb after putting it in)?




Yep clean latex gloves (cotton gloves are even better if you have them - but latex or nitrile works just fine) or a holding the bulb in a clean cloth works.




How do you clean your finger prints if you leave any?




You can clean them afterwards as well, a good wipe down with a clean microfibre cloth will do the job.






share|improve this answer





















  • 4





    If you don't have glove or a clean cloth, a paper towel works good as well. The ultimate here would be to use cotton gloves, but they aren't nearly as prevalent as latex or nitrile gloves are.

    – Pᴀᴜʟsᴛᴇʀ2
    yesterday











  • Clean halogen lights using a glass cleaner, make sure it's dry before you turn it on, that should only take a minute.

    – GdD
    yesterday






  • 1





    Rubbing alcohol works well if you have touched the bulb.

    – David Watson
    yesterday






  • 1





    @GdD once the glass part of the bulb is inside the headlight unit then removing the foam cover from the glass will be challenging... I have always managed to get halogen bulbs fitted by just holding the metal or plastic parts...

    – Solar Mike
    yesterday






  • 1





    It depends on the car I guess @SolarMike.

    – GdD
    yesterday
















17















Why is this a thing?




For bulbs it is - spark plugs don't care. The problem with getting fingerprints on bulbs (specifically halogen-type bulbs) is actually the grease that gets left behind - the bulb will get quite hot when lit and grease on a portion of the bulb will cause differences in the rate of heating on the bulb surface and thanks to the way materials expand when heated this means you get different parts of the bulb expanding at different rates and... crack.



Where the bulbs are made from quartz glass (such as in certain more powerful bulbs from some manufacturers) there is also the issue of devitrification - where the oils/salts left behind in the finger print can potentially cause the material to weaken although typically car bulbs aren't going to get hot enough for this to occur although some fogging of the glass may occur.




On what else one should not leave finger prints?




Probably a bit broad to answer here I'm afraid.




How does one avoid leaving finger prints (latex gloves or cleaning say the light bulb after putting it in)?




Yep clean latex gloves (cotton gloves are even better if you have them - but latex or nitrile works just fine) or a holding the bulb in a clean cloth works.




How do you clean your finger prints if you leave any?




You can clean them afterwards as well, a good wipe down with a clean microfibre cloth will do the job.






share|improve this answer





















  • 4





    If you don't have glove or a clean cloth, a paper towel works good as well. The ultimate here would be to use cotton gloves, but they aren't nearly as prevalent as latex or nitrile gloves are.

    – Pᴀᴜʟsᴛᴇʀ2
    yesterday











  • Clean halogen lights using a glass cleaner, make sure it's dry before you turn it on, that should only take a minute.

    – GdD
    yesterday






  • 1





    Rubbing alcohol works well if you have touched the bulb.

    – David Watson
    yesterday






  • 1





    @GdD once the glass part of the bulb is inside the headlight unit then removing the foam cover from the glass will be challenging... I have always managed to get halogen bulbs fitted by just holding the metal or plastic parts...

    – Solar Mike
    yesterday






  • 1





    It depends on the car I guess @SolarMike.

    – GdD
    yesterday














17












17








17








Why is this a thing?




For bulbs it is - spark plugs don't care. The problem with getting fingerprints on bulbs (specifically halogen-type bulbs) is actually the grease that gets left behind - the bulb will get quite hot when lit and grease on a portion of the bulb will cause differences in the rate of heating on the bulb surface and thanks to the way materials expand when heated this means you get different parts of the bulb expanding at different rates and... crack.



Where the bulbs are made from quartz glass (such as in certain more powerful bulbs from some manufacturers) there is also the issue of devitrification - where the oils/salts left behind in the finger print can potentially cause the material to weaken although typically car bulbs aren't going to get hot enough for this to occur although some fogging of the glass may occur.




On what else one should not leave finger prints?




Probably a bit broad to answer here I'm afraid.




How does one avoid leaving finger prints (latex gloves or cleaning say the light bulb after putting it in)?




Yep clean latex gloves (cotton gloves are even better if you have them - but latex or nitrile works just fine) or a holding the bulb in a clean cloth works.




How do you clean your finger prints if you leave any?




You can clean them afterwards as well, a good wipe down with a clean microfibre cloth will do the job.






share|improve this answer
















Why is this a thing?




For bulbs it is - spark plugs don't care. The problem with getting fingerprints on bulbs (specifically halogen-type bulbs) is actually the grease that gets left behind - the bulb will get quite hot when lit and grease on a portion of the bulb will cause differences in the rate of heating on the bulb surface and thanks to the way materials expand when heated this means you get different parts of the bulb expanding at different rates and... crack.



Where the bulbs are made from quartz glass (such as in certain more powerful bulbs from some manufacturers) there is also the issue of devitrification - where the oils/salts left behind in the finger print can potentially cause the material to weaken although typically car bulbs aren't going to get hot enough for this to occur although some fogging of the glass may occur.




On what else one should not leave finger prints?




Probably a bit broad to answer here I'm afraid.




How does one avoid leaving finger prints (latex gloves or cleaning say the light bulb after putting it in)?




Yep clean latex gloves (cotton gloves are even better if you have them - but latex or nitrile works just fine) or a holding the bulb in a clean cloth works.




How do you clean your finger prints if you leave any?




You can clean them afterwards as well, a good wipe down with a clean microfibre cloth will do the job.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









motosubatsumotosubatsu

5,04711029




5,04711029








  • 4





    If you don't have glove or a clean cloth, a paper towel works good as well. The ultimate here would be to use cotton gloves, but they aren't nearly as prevalent as latex or nitrile gloves are.

    – Pᴀᴜʟsᴛᴇʀ2
    yesterday











  • Clean halogen lights using a glass cleaner, make sure it's dry before you turn it on, that should only take a minute.

    – GdD
    yesterday






  • 1





    Rubbing alcohol works well if you have touched the bulb.

    – David Watson
    yesterday






  • 1





    @GdD once the glass part of the bulb is inside the headlight unit then removing the foam cover from the glass will be challenging... I have always managed to get halogen bulbs fitted by just holding the metal or plastic parts...

    – Solar Mike
    yesterday






  • 1





    It depends on the car I guess @SolarMike.

    – GdD
    yesterday














  • 4





    If you don't have glove or a clean cloth, a paper towel works good as well. The ultimate here would be to use cotton gloves, but they aren't nearly as prevalent as latex or nitrile gloves are.

    – Pᴀᴜʟsᴛᴇʀ2
    yesterday











  • Clean halogen lights using a glass cleaner, make sure it's dry before you turn it on, that should only take a minute.

    – GdD
    yesterday






  • 1





    Rubbing alcohol works well if you have touched the bulb.

    – David Watson
    yesterday






  • 1





    @GdD once the glass part of the bulb is inside the headlight unit then removing the foam cover from the glass will be challenging... I have always managed to get halogen bulbs fitted by just holding the metal or plastic parts...

    – Solar Mike
    yesterday






  • 1





    It depends on the car I guess @SolarMike.

    – GdD
    yesterday








4




4





If you don't have glove or a clean cloth, a paper towel works good as well. The ultimate here would be to use cotton gloves, but they aren't nearly as prevalent as latex or nitrile gloves are.

– Pᴀᴜʟsᴛᴇʀ2
yesterday





If you don't have glove or a clean cloth, a paper towel works good as well. The ultimate here would be to use cotton gloves, but they aren't nearly as prevalent as latex or nitrile gloves are.

– Pᴀᴜʟsᴛᴇʀ2
yesterday













Clean halogen lights using a glass cleaner, make sure it's dry before you turn it on, that should only take a minute.

– GdD
yesterday





Clean halogen lights using a glass cleaner, make sure it's dry before you turn it on, that should only take a minute.

– GdD
yesterday




1




1





Rubbing alcohol works well if you have touched the bulb.

– David Watson
yesterday





Rubbing alcohol works well if you have touched the bulb.

– David Watson
yesterday




1




1





@GdD once the glass part of the bulb is inside the headlight unit then removing the foam cover from the glass will be challenging... I have always managed to get halogen bulbs fitted by just holding the metal or plastic parts...

– Solar Mike
yesterday





@GdD once the glass part of the bulb is inside the headlight unit then removing the foam cover from the glass will be challenging... I have always managed to get halogen bulbs fitted by just holding the metal or plastic parts...

– Solar Mike
yesterday




1




1





It depends on the car I guess @SolarMike.

– GdD
yesterday





It depends on the car I guess @SolarMike.

– GdD
yesterday











5














Fingerprints on spark plugs aren't a thing, the natural oils on your skin won't affect their operation. If, however, your fingers are covered in car grease or dirt when you handle the plugs then that can cause issues, either interfering with the electrode or the cable connection to the plug terminal.



If you foul the plugs with dirt or grease then clean them before use. Any dirt on the electrode is going to end up in your cylinder!



For halogen lights @Motosubatsu's answer is pretty comprehensive, I would only add to be careful if handling with facial tissues (i.e. Kleenex), which some people do. Some types of tissues have been treated with moisturizers which will contaminate the bulb and cause the same issues as fingerprints. Toilet tissue generally doesn't, neither do paper towels.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    I would say even tissues without moisturizers would be a bad idea. The oils from your fingers would probably go right through a normal tissue

    – Aethenosity
    yesterday













  • I tend to use the cardboard box the lamp came in. I figure its clean enough for the lamp's glass for transit - its clean enough for the install. Yet another reason why plastic blister packaging sucks.

    – Criggie
    3 hours ago
















5














Fingerprints on spark plugs aren't a thing, the natural oils on your skin won't affect their operation. If, however, your fingers are covered in car grease or dirt when you handle the plugs then that can cause issues, either interfering with the electrode or the cable connection to the plug terminal.



If you foul the plugs with dirt or grease then clean them before use. Any dirt on the electrode is going to end up in your cylinder!



For halogen lights @Motosubatsu's answer is pretty comprehensive, I would only add to be careful if handling with facial tissues (i.e. Kleenex), which some people do. Some types of tissues have been treated with moisturizers which will contaminate the bulb and cause the same issues as fingerprints. Toilet tissue generally doesn't, neither do paper towels.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    I would say even tissues without moisturizers would be a bad idea. The oils from your fingers would probably go right through a normal tissue

    – Aethenosity
    yesterday













  • I tend to use the cardboard box the lamp came in. I figure its clean enough for the lamp's glass for transit - its clean enough for the install. Yet another reason why plastic blister packaging sucks.

    – Criggie
    3 hours ago














5












5








5







Fingerprints on spark plugs aren't a thing, the natural oils on your skin won't affect their operation. If, however, your fingers are covered in car grease or dirt when you handle the plugs then that can cause issues, either interfering with the electrode or the cable connection to the plug terminal.



If you foul the plugs with dirt or grease then clean them before use. Any dirt on the electrode is going to end up in your cylinder!



For halogen lights @Motosubatsu's answer is pretty comprehensive, I would only add to be careful if handling with facial tissues (i.e. Kleenex), which some people do. Some types of tissues have been treated with moisturizers which will contaminate the bulb and cause the same issues as fingerprints. Toilet tissue generally doesn't, neither do paper towels.






share|improve this answer















Fingerprints on spark plugs aren't a thing, the natural oils on your skin won't affect their operation. If, however, your fingers are covered in car grease or dirt when you handle the plugs then that can cause issues, either interfering with the electrode or the cable connection to the plug terminal.



If you foul the plugs with dirt or grease then clean them before use. Any dirt on the electrode is going to end up in your cylinder!



For halogen lights @Motosubatsu's answer is pretty comprehensive, I would only add to be careful if handling with facial tissues (i.e. Kleenex), which some people do. Some types of tissues have been treated with moisturizers which will contaminate the bulb and cause the same issues as fingerprints. Toilet tissue generally doesn't, neither do paper towels.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









GdDGdD

5,6381126




5,6381126








  • 1





    I would say even tissues without moisturizers would be a bad idea. The oils from your fingers would probably go right through a normal tissue

    – Aethenosity
    yesterday













  • I tend to use the cardboard box the lamp came in. I figure its clean enough for the lamp's glass for transit - its clean enough for the install. Yet another reason why plastic blister packaging sucks.

    – Criggie
    3 hours ago














  • 1





    I would say even tissues without moisturizers would be a bad idea. The oils from your fingers would probably go right through a normal tissue

    – Aethenosity
    yesterday













  • I tend to use the cardboard box the lamp came in. I figure its clean enough for the lamp's glass for transit - its clean enough for the install. Yet another reason why plastic blister packaging sucks.

    – Criggie
    3 hours ago








1




1





I would say even tissues without moisturizers would be a bad idea. The oils from your fingers would probably go right through a normal tissue

– Aethenosity
yesterday







I would say even tissues without moisturizers would be a bad idea. The oils from your fingers would probably go right through a normal tissue

– Aethenosity
yesterday















I tend to use the cardboard box the lamp came in. I figure its clean enough for the lamp's glass for transit - its clean enough for the install. Yet another reason why plastic blister packaging sucks.

– Criggie
3 hours ago





I tend to use the cardboard box the lamp came in. I figure its clean enough for the lamp's glass for transit - its clean enough for the install. Yet another reason why plastic blister packaging sucks.

– Criggie
3 hours ago


















draft saved

draft discarded




















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Motor Vehicle Maintenance & Repair Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid



  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmechanics.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f64583%2fwhy-one-should-not-leave-fingerprints-on-bulbs-and-plugs%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Plaza Victoria

In PowerPoint, is there a keyboard shortcut for bulleted / numbered list?

How to put 3 figures in Latex with 2 figures side by side and 1 below these side by side images but in...