What is the best Power Outlet, and why?
-
Type B is objectively inferior. This is not anti-americanism either, Technology Connections has my back here. But it's not bad enough to replace three big countries worth of plugs and outlets. The only way to have a global standard would be something like Italy's plug orgy system where you can fit multiple different types but that would kinda defy the purpose.
So you say technology connections has your back but you didn't even say why it's inferior my first thought is you have no idea why. It just seems dumb posting that without any sorta proof.
-
A useful source:
https://worldofsockets.comI declare RJ45 and USB C everything! But for big boi power….. no clue.
-
These are the best anyway
-
why would you shove things into it's mouth?
Because it likes it.
-
Earth pin is a safety feature and a good one at that.
So is the shutter system. Blocking contacts unless a third is pushed in is great safety, particularly with kids.
-
F plugs are the only type I've ever seen in all of Scandinavia, Germany, Spain and The Czech Republic. Never in my life have I seen an E plug or anything resembling a variation of E+F combined in any way. Only F. I don't understand how you can say they "are not really a thing anymore".
You mean not a thing in the UK?
Went to Poland for a few days and encountered the type e plugs and I immediately hated them because they interfere with chargers and they weren't reversible.
-
wrote last edited by [email protected]
Only if they're charged.
P.S.: since battery cells need to be disposed properly, they are now an 18+ purchase.
-
Type J is superior in every aspect.
- compact, you can fit 3 plugs into an outlet while Type F only fits one for example.
- robust.
- cannot reverse polarity.
- no fuse required as the law requires proper fuses in every electric installation with law enforced periodical checks.
- round pins that cannot puncture your skin if you step on them. It's hard to face the pins upwards anyway.
---------
Compact in one dimension, but it is very long.
This makes it awkward in tight spaces compared to something like a UK plug. -
If the device wants the current to go in a certain direction
That's not how AC works
they use one with a slightly larger prong on one side,
That's not Ground, it's Neutral. Neutral is sometimes bonded to Ground, but they are fundamentally different things
- Yeah it's just a potential difference, not a one directional flow really
- No one said it's ground? The ground is on the third prong
-
Earth pin is a safety feature and a good one at that.
wrote last edited by [email protected]For your toaster or iron, yes. For your USB power supply, mobile charger, LED table lamp, game console, etc., which doesn’t even have an earth connection, not so much. But your power board takes up twice the space of a European one with a row of slender unearthed sockets for such devices.
The British standard is still stuck in 1947, where the expected use cases were kettles, washing machines, pre-transistor radios using high-voltage thermionic valves, and the domestic labour-saving devices of the midcentury that needed to be earthed. That and the shortage of copper that led to British houses being wired with a ring main, and each plug having its own fuse, rather than separately fused circuits as elsewhere.
-
Fusing plugs is completely unnecessary. The only reason this is done in the UK is because of old janky circuits only used in the UK.
So still necessary in the UK
-
USB. Most things don’t need AC power. We can get rid of wall warts and create a universal standard by including USB C ports on AC plugs.
On my way to power my fridge and oven by usb-c!
-
So is the shutter system. Blocking contacts unless a third is pushed in is great safety, particularly with kids.
And having your chargers look like clown shoes compared to the slender 2-pin chargers used in Europe, Australia and elsewhere is a small price to pay.
Do more kids really die of electrocution in, say, France or Germany than the UK?
-
A useful source:
https://worldofsockets.comOh, a list of things each identified by a different letter, better put them in a completely random order.
-
South Africa is also slowly adopting Type-N.
Europe was supposed to, but abandoned the idea
Interesting. How far along is South Africa’s adoption of it? Are they appearing in newly built houses or on appliances? And how are they handling the transition?
If 2-pin Europlugs won’t fit into a Type N, Europe may be better off in adopting the Swiss variant (which they do fit).
-
When did type N become common?
It became mandatory for all new products in 2011, so a few years after that most people were used to it, though there's many people still using adapters to this day.
-
why would you shove things into it's mouth?
I think shoving things into its eyes is more concerning
-
Interesting. How far along is South Africa’s adoption of it? Are they appearing in newly built houses or on appliances? And how are they handling the transition?
If 2-pin Europlugs won’t fit into a Type N, Europe may be better off in adopting the Swiss variant (which they do fit).
South Africa used to use a Mixture of M and C, and still mostly do.
But since 2018 building regulations require new houses to have at least one Type N plug installed.
Adoption is slow, but N being compatible with C will hopefully speed things along. -
A useful source:
https://worldofsockets.comThis diagram doesn’t do the utter goofiness of type M justice.
Here are a few styles you will come across.
-
Easy. Type G. For safety. If you're worried about night-time attacks from ninja you can leave a few plugs by your bedroom door and windows with the pins upward. They will rue the day they entered that room in the dark!
Type G. For safety.
G