Originally posted by Lance
					
						
						
							
							
							
							
								
								
								
								
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Reply to: Boris gets the check book out.
				
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Previously on "Boris gets the check book out."
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I was only using this as an example. I wasn't suggesting that this was actually the case.
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No they haven't, again you are jumping to conclusions. The type C plug is used on devices which are insulated. In the UK you will find plenty of these as well where the 3rd pin isn't used.Originally posted by Bean View PostPerhaps our continental cousins finally realised a safety feature was a good thing, as the old continental plugs were more like this;
Power plug & outlet Type C - World Standards
You don't need to earth a plastic device.
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Originally posted by Whorty View PostYes
					Last edited by original PM; 18 June 2019, 07:52.
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Looks like a UK shaver plug.Originally posted by Bean View PostPerhaps our continental cousins finally realised a safety feature was a good thing, as the old continental plugs were more like this;
Power plug & outlet Type C - World Standards
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Two prong plugs are fine. It was the sockets that were problematical, and eventually made illegal to fit.Originally posted by Bean View PostPerhaps our continental cousins finally realised a safety feature was a good thing, as the old continental plugs were more like this;
Power plug & outlet Type C - World Standards
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Perhaps our continental cousins finally realised a safety feature was a good thing, as the old continental plugs were more like this;Originally posted by BlasterBates View Post
Power plug & outlet Type C - World Standards
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No it isn't. Two pronged plug has a metal clip that does exactly the same thing as a three pronged plug. In other words it also has an extra ground connection, it just isn't a prong.Originally posted by Bean View PostYes.
Go have a look at a UK plug, whilst paying close attention to the bottom two holes - now stick a fork in the top hole and watch as magic happens before your eyes.
The top hole is a safety device, that when the top prong is inserted, elevates the safety barriers in the bottom 2 holes, to allow the bottom 2 prongs to make a circuit.
So yes, the UK plug is objectively safer than the 2 hole equivalent.
Perhaps on the continent, they're using it as a form of Darwinian selection for children?Last edited by BlasterBates; 14 June 2019, 14:04.
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I just stuck a fork in the plug here, all it does is trip a circuit breaker for the room.Originally posted by Bean View PostYes.
Go have a look at a UK plug, whilst paying close attention to the bottom two holes - now stick a fork in the top hole and watch as magic happens before your eyes.
The top hole is a safety device, that when the top prong is inserted, elevates the safety barriers in the bottom 2 holes, to allow the bottom 2 prongs to make a circuit.
So yes, the UK plug is objectively safer than the 2 hole equivalent.
Perhaps on the continent, they're using it as a form of Darwinian selection for children?
Mind you, I look like Don King now
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