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BillyBobMarley wrote:
On Jul 18, 2:42Â*am, Jeff wrote: Â*Plugs and receptacles are standardized, which makes almost certain the appliances are properly connected. Â*(In the UK it appears that appliances are sold without a plug and rely on the consumer to do the right thing.) Not so, it has been illegal to sell mains devices without an attached plug for many years now in the UK. There is only 1 type of plug, (excluding shavers sockets which are transformer isolated), which is non-reversible and always has the provision for an earth (Not always used with double insulated devices, but still the pin must be there, sometimes in plastic). The sockets are shuttered to prevent accidental 'prodding' by little fingers. Jeff Not to be a smart ass but weren't a lot of the old British cars equipped with a positive ground? What's up with that? I think it had something to do with the cars driving on the left side of the road... Either that, or it rains so much in the UK the electrons that would normally jump up are washed down by all that water so you have to put the negative side up to capture the electrons... The fun part of owning one of those cars was watching panic on someone's face when you got a jump start and hooked the jumper cables up backwards. |
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