Power points, and power leads.... aaarrrgh!!!
Ever noticed problems with the arrangement of power points?
I have had a number of problems over thee years and I wonder
if the manufacturers ever do their homework in this area.
Sometimes the male fitting on a lead has the lead coming out to
the left , sometimes under the vertical pin, sometimes, just for
fun, just slightly tilted to the left or right of this position, but mostly
straight from the back.
I have had trouble with all this nonsense because, when using double
outlets or a bank of outlets these varying lead arrangements mean that
one lead may not allow another lead to be used on an adjacentoutlet.
The space between the outlets on a bank may not be great enough to allow
the use of some plugs in adjacent outlets. This is particularly so with some
charging devices.
I have tried in vain to find outlet banks that have a more generous space
between adjacent female outlets.
I am now officially P&^%&* off!!!:aargh::aargh::aargh:
I miss my Pommy powerpoints....
:ranton:
Australian plugs and power points seriously drive me NUTS!!!
Plugs: Cables entry at from the bottom, angled to the left, angled to the right or worst of all; straight in so the whole assembly sticks out three or four ruddy inches or pulls if you so much as look at it...extension cord locks?
Flimsy little contacts that bend as soon as you look at them.
Power adapters/transformers etc too large or stupidly hanging off to one side so they take up TWO sockets.
Cheap and nasty plastic that somehow costs a lot for what you actually get.
Sockets and wiring: Manufactured from thermoplastic so they melt or burn nicely
Awfull switches with tiny little miserable little contacts
No pattresses needed to mount sockets. C clips? How in the name of various acts of fornication can these be an acceptable method of mounting a socket in plasterboard?
Cables just laying around above ceilings? I remember cable clips; they were nice...
Sockets above sinks and draining boards? "S'allright Mate, just gotta make sure it's more than six inches above..."
Tree wiring systems? "I'll fit all the extra sockets you want mate; if you start dragging too much current the CB will knock'em all off"
I miss my pommy stuff. Big chunky plugs that actually all fit together on one powerboard and have all the cables coming out the same way. Impossible to pull a plug out of a socket by pulling on the cable. Absolutely no need whatsoever to lock a plug into an extension cord! Oh, and a FUSE in the plug rated to the actual equipment so you don't have to just rely on a circuit breaker. And all that for around than 2 bucks each! All plugs, sockets and switches made from thermosetting plastics. Loop wiring so cable currents are actually halved and the circuit breaker will trip well before the cable starts to get warm. Sockets fitted into either EARTHED or DOUBLE INSULATED mounting boxes that are securely fixed to the wall and don't let baby lizards crawl into the switches. Switches! Switches that operate with a satisfactory "click" when operated, not a "fizzle" as the baby lizard inside it takes up smoking. Absolutely no mains sockets or hand switches allowed in a bathroom or within TWO METERS of a kitchen sink. Which is earthed, along with all the copper piping in the house. But not to a little copper stake in the ground. Which is also connected to the Neutral return line. ###???
Oh crap; I just remembered: SWER lines!!! How in the name of all that's holy can it be regarded as remotely safe to feed a power supply using only the Live conductor and have the Neutral line just connected to the aforementioned earth stake poked into the ground? Seriously, how hard can it be to run TWO cables?
:rantoff:
Standing by for the invitations to return from whence I came........:whistling2: