The link above is good and common practice - what I use on my own tablesaw - but the panel mount bit must be a plug,
But how often do we see some really dangerous practices. The last one I saw was a guy with a small generator that had fitted a three pin plug so that he could plug it into his house to power it up when the mains was off !but the panel mount bit must be a plug,
Google "suicide lead" or "suicide cord" ...But how often do we see some really dangerous practices. The last one I saw was a guy with a small generator that had fitted a three pin plug so that he could plug it into his house to power it up when the mains was off !
it was sourced from france by a uk distributor, the labels on the crate stated this. ive ordered a whole new surface mounted plug and mating part in uk spec, thanksTo you it's a "strange" plug. To a German it's "standard" (domestic) I think. To me it doesn't look like a caravan plug, they're usually much bigger and blue not black. Unless the picture is not showing the "real size", I think that the plug in your picture is a standard German domestic 220V plug.
If so:
FYI, there is really no such thing as a "standard Euro plug" unless we're talking plugs for just two cores, NOT three. With a three core lead (the third being the earth) it's usually the Earth "pin" where the differences lie. As in the case of the German plug you show.
In your picture, the centre upper "pin" (it's not, it's a socket, but notice the two bent metal strips in the outer perimeter above and below) ALL form "the" one earth connection. (Because the German plugs have different formats too. Do NOT ask me why that is, I have no idea, it's "just the way it is")!
What I have done in the past when changing such a German plug (to Swiss - yes, different to German! - or UK) is simply to cut the whole German plug off and throw it away (unless you'll ever need it again of course). I do that with both moulded-on plugs and with screwed-on types.
Then simply trim back the outer sheath insulation, exposing the three separate cores (they should be blue, brown, and green/yellow striped, just like UK, unless really old, which I doubt 'cos you say the machine is new). Then wire the lead up to your standard UK plug, just as you always do it.
I stress I am NOT a qualified electrician. But having moved around the world fairly extensively I can assure you that the above works and is safe.
HTH
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