>>212357207 >>212357246 Have you never done that experiment in your countries were you fill a balloon with water and hold it up to a flame and the balloon stays intact?
>>212357376 my point is that a thin rubber sleeve is easily broken and you risk electrocution if live circuit gets in contact with water, a tough corrugated tube would help avoid that
>>212350841 (OP) Se echรณ a perder el calefont y no tengo agua caliente hasta maรฑana
Anonymous
7/3/2025, 12:23:47 AM No.212360432
>>212360124 That's called a "lil brasilian gay" (viadiรฑo) in my country, gays use it to clean their assholes before sodomizing each other, I traded mine for a bag of lemon limes
>>212362944 I guess in case there's not some place for it anywhere else Here the bathrooms usually have smaller ceilings and on top of them there's a place you access from top of the bathroom's door and that's where the heater is
Anonymous
7/3/2025, 2:23:39 AM No.212363022
>>212354449 Never happens, the heating metal does melt THOUGH. And then you spend 10000 guaranies to purchase another one >>212360641 not now it's 8C (im frozen) >>212350841 (OP) if you're sleepy touch it a bit
>>212362881 Not really the fault of the shower, but the exposed wires
Anonymous
7/3/2025, 10:33:33 AM No.212369910
>>212361440 this is in greece there is no grounding cable hence the electrocution
Anonymous
7/3/2025, 11:16:39 AM No.212370733
>>212369072 People in Brazil (and I guess Paraguay too) are woefully afraid of gas heating systems. They believe it'll explode or something like that. Also, those countries have very limited gas pumbling systems
>>212361440 what puzzles me the most is that there is no short circuit breaker anywere in that house or in the electric system that is connected to the building