Sounds like old man Kirsch... who, after we put LV electrolytics in the outlet strips on his bench, adjusted our attitudes by relocating those caps to OUR workbenches (of course he knew who the perpetrators were by that time) and turning them off at the breaker box behind the door, where he could set them off for best effect during workbook time.
I was the only one who noticed the caps BEFORE the fireworks... because I actually followed his lab checklist EVERY TIME and MADE SURE of what was plugged into the power strip, and that it was turned OFF before I sat down.
"I'm going to have to watch you, young man." was all he said.
In my high school electronics vo-tech class, each bench was equipped with a RCA trainer rack, which held a variety of single purpose plugins - filters, amplifiers, oscillators, and of course, power supplies. To improve the learning experience the back of each plug-in had a few components that could be changed, mounted on phenolic board plugins. Including, of course, the power supply. This being the seventies, these were vacuum tube circuits, with the attendant voltages.
Now why anyone thought it was a good idea to let teenagers loose on these things, I don't know, but it didn't take long to envision what a spectacular flash-bang there'd be if one, umm, accidentally reversed one of the plug-in electrolytics on the power supply plugin. Even better if the boom occurred at the bench of the class bully.
I was the meekest kid in the room and so not on the short list of suspects, though I imagine Mr. Menzie had a notion...
LOL... I got to know Kirschy pretty well over the years at my High school; and
discovered later that this was in fact a compliment. I took every course of his I could (including all the metal shop ones). I remember when he was doing his "Introduction to Electricity" stuff... he was talking about AC power, the shape of the sine wave and what it meant, and I made some comment about 240V and 3-phase, thinking I knew what I was talking about. "Household wiring has the same three legs, but it isn't 3-phase. Three phase is something completely different."
Frustrated, I asked him "What's the difference then?" He didn't say anything, but instead quickly sketched out the 4 quadrants & dotted line we all knew by then represented the screen of an oscilloscope on the chalkboard. I stood up, watching him, and as he drew the staggered traces of 3-phase AC power, it dawned... I grokked a whole new level of understanding. "I said an enthusiastic "Thank you, sir!" and sat back down, whereupon he immediately went back to the lesson at hand, while I pondered everything that exchange revealed to my budding mind. Questions of how a transformer could pass the waveform unmolested, how a 3-phase transformer might be made differently... how even modern electric motors were almost all 3-phase motors, and the run capacitor just simulated the 3rd phase all fell into place. It was a
"That's good; you've just taken your first step into a larger world." moment for me.
I don't think I've ever had a single teacher (except maybe one math teacher who actually made quadratic equations accessible to my mechanical mind) who taught me as much as he did.
mnem
*toddles off to ded*