Ever heard of a ceiling light falling into pool...

...due to the "corrosive nature of the humid, chorinated air"? This happened recently at a pool I swim at, and I have never heard of it happening anywhere. Thoughts? Experiences? I'm hearing from the peanut gallery (i.e. non-swimmers) that this sort of thing must happen or will happen elsewhere. Seems to me places like California and Florida, with the added salt in the air, would have safety measures/materials built in. So my thought, initially, is a) it was a fluke, or b) the construction wasn't done by a company experienced in pools. Thanks for any thoughts.
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  • ...due to the "corrosive nature of the humid, chorinated air"? This happened recently at a pool I swim at, and I have never heard of it happening anywhere. Thoughts? Experiences? I'm hearing from the peanut gallery (i.e. non-swimmers) that this sort of thing must happen or will happen elsewhere. Seems to me places like California and Florida, with the added salt in the air, would have safety measures/materials built in. So my thought, initially, is a) it was a fluke, or b) the construction wasn't done by a company experienced in pools. Thanks for any thoughts. Maybe that is why California and Florida have so many outdoor pools LOL Yes, this happened to our main pool in college. Some part of a light fixture fell into the pool for unknown reason (fortunately while nobody was in the pool - I don't even know if anybody was in the area to see it). We had to stay out of the pool for a couple weeks while they inspected the rest of the fixtures. Fortunately we had a 4-lane 25y pool in the building to use during the interim (better than nothing).
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  • ...due to the "corrosive nature of the humid, chorinated air"? This happened recently at a pool I swim at, and I have never heard of it happening anywhere. Thoughts? Experiences? I'm hearing from the peanut gallery (i.e. non-swimmers) that this sort of thing must happen or will happen elsewhere. Seems to me places like California and Florida, with the added salt in the air, would have safety measures/materials built in. So my thought, initially, is a) it was a fluke, or b) the construction wasn't done by a company experienced in pools. Thanks for any thoughts. Maybe that is why California and Florida have so many outdoor pools LOL Yes, this happened to our main pool in college. Some part of a light fixture fell into the pool for unknown reason (fortunately while nobody was in the pool - I don't even know if anybody was in the area to see it). We had to stay out of the pool for a couple weeks while they inspected the rest of the fixtures. Fortunately we had a 4-lane 25y pool in the building to use during the interim (better than nothing).
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