Harry Wilkes | 24/06/2023 18:08:41 |
![]() 1613 forum posts 72 photos | One of my pet hate's today I purchased a DVD player which I,m happy with apart from the power lead it's one of those stupid one where the cable comes out of the top of the 13amp plug 'why' H |
DC31k | 24/06/2023 19:01:42 |
1186 forum posts 11 photos | Remove screws from socket in wall. Rotate 180 degrees. Re-install screws. Cable now comes out of the bottom. |
Nigel Graham 2 | 24/06/2023 21:36:39 |
3293 forum posts 112 photos | I wonder if it's done to cope with homes that have had carpets fitted so thick that they interfere with using sockets placed in skirting-boards! |
old mart | 24/06/2023 21:37:04 |
4655 forum posts 304 photos | I don't think I have come across a plug like that, but can see one advantage, when used with a DVD player or TV, when the wall socket is behind them, the wiring does not have to loop back up. |
Bazyle | 24/06/2023 21:45:18 |
![]() 6956 forum posts 229 photos | You know the American 3 pin socket. On another forum there has been a long discussion of which is the correct way up to fit them. It makes more of a difference for them as the plug/socket combination is at best rather wobbly apparently. |
Martin Connelly | 25/06/2023 07:27:29 |
![]() 2549 forum posts 235 photos | I have also seen a socket where a central heating pipe had been routed below it causing issues with some moulded on plugs with a stiff cable strain relief being part of the moulding. Martin C |
Mick B1 | 25/06/2023 08:16:04 |
2444 forum posts 139 photos | It stops you using one of those cuboid socket-doublers where there's one socket on top and another on the rear face. You can't use the top one as the cord fouls the wall, and if you use the rear one, the top one becomes unusable. Perhaps that's the idea. |
John Doe 2 | 25/06/2023 08:17:50 |
![]() 441 forum posts 29 photos | Annoying, but a 5 min job to cut the plug off and fit a normal one. And an opportunity to fit the correct fuse - I bet the supplied one was a 13 A. |
Oven Man | 25/06/2023 09:25:05 |
![]() 204 forum posts 37 photos | Posted by John Doe 2 on 25/06/2023 08:17:50:
Annoying, but a 5 min job to cut the plug off and fit a normal one. And an opportunity to fit the correct fuse - I bet the supplied one was a 13 A. Be careful, it may well be a plug with a power supply built in. I have never seen a standard 13 amp plug where the cable does not come out the bottom. Peter |
SillyOldDuffer | 25/06/2023 09:33:11 |
10668 forum posts 2415 photos | I'm intrigued! I've come across at least 3 variants of the 13A plug and socket, but never one where the cable came out the top! Is it a plug or a wall-wart power-supply? The latter often have the output cable on the top. Sometimes it's a good thing - ordinary plugs don't go into this socket because lower cable fouls the base. No problem for the wall-wart. Or, the top exit blocks another socket: Clear proof of the inherent cussedness of things! Dave Edited By SillyOldDuffer on 25/06/2023 09:34:33 |
David George 1 | 25/06/2023 09:40:39 |
![]() 2110 forum posts 565 photos | It s sounds like you have a non conforming plug. Counterfeits and non-standard plugsEditPlugs which do not meet BS 1363 often find their way into the UK. Some of these are legal in the country they are manufactured in, but do not meet BS 1363 – these can be brought into the UK by unsuspecting travellers, or people purchasing electrical goods online. They can also be purchased through many UK electrical component distributors. There are also counterfeit plugs which appear to meet the standards (and are marked as such) but do not in fact comply. Legislation[18] was introduced, with the last revision in 1994, to require plugs sold to meet the technical standard. Counterfeit products are regularly seized when found, to enforce the safety standards and to protect the approval marks and trademarks of imitated manufacturers.[61] The pressure group PlugSafe[62] reported in March 2014 that since August 2011 "thousands" of listings of products including illegal plugs had been removed from the UK sections of the websites eBay and Amazon Marketplace. The UK Electrical Safety Council expressed shock at the magnitude of the problem and published a video[63] showing a plug exploding due to a counterfeit BS 1362 fuse. The Institution of Engineering and Technology also published information on the extent of the problem with on-line retailers, many advertising replacement cord sets, mobile device chargers, and travel adaptors fraudulently marked BS 1363, and mentioning the same sites.[64] David |
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