"You have to walk a half-mile to find a public telephone, but when you get there, you find that it has been constructed as though the senseless dynamiting of public telephones had been a problem in the recent past."
The authors of that article are clearly uniformed to have given the so-called 'european' plug such a bad rating and describing it as featurelaess.
In fact the European plug (which in used in all of europe except for denmark and such inconsequential islands as Malta, Cyprus, Ireland and one other which name escapes me at the moment) is not in fact standardized or featureless.
While the same two prongs and a round base is used all over europe different countries implement the grounding differently. In France a grounding-tine actually extends from the socket to be inserted into the plug. In Germany the plug is grounded contacts in ridges on the side of the plug.
Most common european plug designs either try to avoid the grounding thing entirely for better electrocution or they create hybrid plugs that will fit into several different socket designs combining German ridges with French holes for better grounding. Surely these can't be called featureless.
As an American, I find myself agreeing with the article: British electrical plugs are superior in many ways (including foot-stabbing potential).
With how lawsuit-happy and "go green!" the US is, I'm surprised we haven't implemented the various anti-shock features of the British plug (e.g. sturdy insulated pins with the conductor at the end, shutters on outlets, each plug being individually fused, etc.) and the energy-saving potential of individually-switched outlets.
This sounds like an English major trying to write a tech article. I thought it would be a real discussion, but had no substance. I'd like my time back please.
What they fail to take into account is the size of the farking thing. You can debate the relative merits of making 110/120 the standard voltage vs 220/240, but the nice compact NEMA plug is wonderful vs. the monstrosities in the UK.
Agreed. Bonus- No smiley face, but it looks like it's been in a bar fight.
heypete:With how lawsuit-happy and "go green!" the US is, I'm surprised we haven't implemented the various anti-shock features of the British plug (e.g. sturdy insulated pins with the conductor at the end, shutters on outlets, each plug being individually fused, etc.) and the energy-saving potential of individually-switched outlets.
Are 'individually fused' plugs the same as standard GFI plugs here?
FTFA: The fuse and sturdy construction prove the British plug is very clearly the safest in the world. But it's better than that, because the sockets also feature shutters that prevent children from inserting paperclips and getting a nasty shock.
uhh, you wont get shocked sticking a paperclip into a plug.
unyon:Are 'individually fused' plugs the same as standard GFI plugs here?
No. GFI outlets detect a current imbalance between hot and neutral. This allows them to rapidly turn off if someone did something stupid, like drop a toaster in the bathtub. Helps prevent electric shocks.
British plugs (i.e. what is inserted into the wall socket) are individually fused, in addition to the fusing/circuit breaker for the wall wiring. My understanding is that the plugs are fused for the maximum current load that the specific appliance would require. That is, while the outlet could supply some large amount of current (say 15-20A), the individual plug would be fused at a lower rating (1A, for example) that is applicable for the device it's connected to.
I'd rather they build one that plugs in easily, stays plugged in but comes out easily when pulled, maybe something as a clicking/snapping type.
They should be as compact as possible, the British bricks are annoying as hell for that.
And brick plugs (the ones with the ac/dc converter at the plug)should be outlawed as you can't fit them in power bars, even the spaced out power bars have problems with some as they are so freaking huge.
FlukeBoy
2009-11-04 02:55:56 PM
(maybe nobody will notice, subby)
AirForceVet
2009-11-04 02:57:04 PM
Eddie Adams from Torrance
2009-11-04 03:07:00 PM
Case closed.
Shostie
2009-11-04 03:11:15 PM
mcsestretch
2009-11-04 03:12:24 PM
FlashHarry
2009-11-04 03:18:40 PM
the swiss ones are awesome.
toddalmighty
2009-11-04 03:24:47 PM
Case closed.
Came in for this. Leaving satisfied.
RockIsDead
2009-11-04 03:38:27 PM
KerwoodDerby
2009-11-04 03:38:47 PM
"You have to walk a half-mile to find a public telephone, but when you get there, you find that it has been constructed as though the senseless dynamiting of public telephones had been a problem in the recent past."
Barakku
2009-11-04 03:49:43 PM
What do you mean "look like?"
Loki-L
2009-11-04 03:50:17 PM
In fact the European plug (which in used in all of europe except for denmark and such inconsequential islands as Malta, Cyprus, Ireland and one other which name escapes me at the moment) is not in fact standardized or featureless.
While the same two prongs and a round base is used all over europe different countries implement the grounding differently. In France a grounding-tine actually extends from the socket to be inserted into the plug. In Germany the plug is grounded contacts in ridges on the side of the plug.
Most common european plug designs either try to avoid the grounding thing entirely for better electrocution or they create hybrid plugs that will fit into several different socket designs combining German ridges with French holes for better grounding. Surely these can't be called featureless.
Postal Penguin
2009-11-04 03:53:00 PM
Giggity.
heypete
2009-11-04 03:57:40 PM
With how lawsuit-happy and "go green!" the US is, I'm surprised we haven't implemented the various anti-shock features of the British plug (e.g. sturdy insulated pins with the conductor at the end, shutters on outlets, each plug being individually fused, etc.) and the energy-saving potential of individually-switched outlets.
gargeug
2009-11-04 03:58:19 PM
M-G
2009-11-04 03:59:41 PM
unyon
2009-11-04 04:04:46 PM
Case closed.
Agreed. Bonus- No smiley face, but it looks like it's been in a bar fight.
heypete: With how lawsuit-happy and "go green!" the US is, I'm surprised we haven't implemented the various anti-shock features of the British plug (e.g. sturdy insulated pins with the conductor at the end, shutters on outlets, each plug being individually fused, etc.) and the energy-saving potential of individually-switched outlets.
Are 'individually fused' plugs the same as standard GFI plugs here?
RoxtarRyan
2009-11-04 04:07:32 PM
Ned Stark
2009-11-04 04:07:47 PM
uhh, you wont get shocked sticking a paperclip into a plug.
heypete
2009-11-04 04:12:22 PM
No. GFI outlets detect a current imbalance between hot and neutral. This allows them to rapidly turn off if someone did something stupid, like drop a toaster in the bathtub. Helps prevent electric shocks.
British plugs (i.e. what is inserted into the wall socket) are individually fused, in addition to the fusing/circuit breaker for the wall wiring. My understanding is that the plugs are fused for the maximum current load that the specific appliance would require. That is, while the outlet could supply some large amount of current (say 15-20A), the individual plug would be fused at a lower rating (1A, for example) that is applicable for the device it's connected to.
there4igraham
2009-11-04 04:12:58 PM
Ask
2009-11-04 04:16:32 PM
Is it really so surprising Denmark is declared the happiest country in the world pretty much every year?
/hot like a freshly electrocuted baby
imfallen_angel
2009-11-04 04:27:51 PM
They should be as compact as possible, the British bricks are annoying as hell for that.
And brick plugs (the ones with the ac/dc converter at the plug)should be outlawed as you can't fit them in power bars, even the spaced out power bars have problems with some as they are so freaking huge.
No plug wins.
Foxxinnia
2009-11-04 04:29:43 PM
Are there any serious articles about electrical outlets?
Masso
2009-11-04 04:31:04 PM
Pixelvision
2009-11-04 04:33:23 PM