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Chris -- 2018-04-11

#1 2006-10-08 04:20:56

bart
Member
From: Edmondson
Registered: 2006-10-08
Posts: 3

busbar

A busbar is, I believe, a thick strip of copper used for electrical distribution and ‘bus’ is short for (like the vehicle) “omnibus”. However nearly everyone in the UK constuction industry ( including consulting electrical engineers) calls them “BUZZ” bars- and they do buzz-probably at 50 Hz.

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#2 2006-10-08 04:29:42

bart
Member
From: Edmondson
Registered: 2006-10-08
Posts: 3

Re: busbar

I’ve found an example:-

I had David one-to-one for a while. He’s very talented but he’s over-confident, making silly mistakes. When I told him that he had left the copper ‘buzz bar’ out of the fuse box he stormed off. But you can’t just storm off when you feel like it.

from
http://www.channel4.com/learning/micros … rics3.html

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#3 2006-10-08 14:58:20

suntexi
Member
Registered: 2006-10-07
Posts: 2

Re: busbar

In eveyone’s computer, there is a common connection called a data bus, and in the mainframe world, there are even bus drivers. Whether the common connector is always known as a bus in electrics as opposed to digital electronics, I don’t know, but the similarity seems too coincidental. In which case, I would submit that “buzz” bar is the eggcorn – and a splendid one it is too.

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