Earth is the middle (at the top & bottom) contact (no pin). The other 2 pins are Live & Neutral and unlike UK plugs can be wired either way - there appears to be no convention.Anyone know how these are wired?View attachment 147744
I was planning on using it in the UK, I'd like to get them the right way round.unlike UK plugs can be wired either way - there appears to be no convention.
It's a vacuum switch which will connect to my mitre saw. I couldn't get a suitable one with a UK plug.I gather that it is a moulded plug so no access. Cut the plug off with some cable and then using a DVM on continuity see what wire color goes to what pin. What is the device this supplies power to?
Sorted then. Thanks all.Colour code in the cable will be right. Just put a UK plug on it.
Convention in France is that phase (live) is on the right, looking at the socket. I.e. same side as UK.I was planning on using it in the UK, I'd like to get them the right way round.
Amazon have them.Anyone know how these are wired?View attachment 147744
Oh that's interesting. I am not aware of any convention here but that may well be pure ignorance on my part.Convention in France is that phase (live) is on the right, looking at the socket. I.e. same side as UK.
As our colour coding was changed to suit the EEC/EU I would think continental colours would be the same.
https://toughleads.co.uk/pages/world-wide-plugs-and-socketsMyself I only use UK and "euro" adaptors on those few items that I regularly travel out of Switzerland with (FGI, Swiss plugs are not the same as "euro" plugs).
It would seem that cutting off the plug and replacing it is reason enough for the supplier/manufacturer to not honor the warranty.IMO, unless you're travelling regularly with something, it's much safer, easier, cheaper, and quicker to just cut off the offending "euro plug" (right where the cable enters the plug, whether it's a moulded-on type or not) and replace it with the standard UK fused plug. If necessary, as someone said above, checking first the cable colours in the new appliance with a meter set to simple continuity checking.
It would seem that cutting off the plug and replacing it is reason enough for the supplier/manufacturer to not honor the warranty.
Well perhaps I've been lucky, but no item where I've done that has needed a Warranty claim. So I don't know if you're right or wrong.
But I will add that provided the new (UK) plug was put on properly, it seems like a very thin excuse to not honour the guarantee, and even ought to be challengeable.
For myself though, I'll continue to do exactly that.
Yes I have heard and seen cases like this and the warranty was void. A good example from a while back was someone fitting a washing machine where the socket was above the worktop and no way would you get the plug through a 1/2 inch hole and no, drilling a larger hole to get the plug through was not an option so the moulded plug had to be cut off. When it began playing up and not completing washing cycles they would not honour the warranty and they had to pay for repair.It would seem that cutting off the plug and replacing it is reason enough for the supplier/manufacturer to not honor the warranty.
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