Domestic AC power plugs and sockets
Information about Domestic AC power plugs and sockets
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This article covers only plugs and sockets intended for common domestic use. For plugs and sockets used for industrial applications, or with more than two current carrying conductors, see Industrial & multiphase power plugs & sockets. For less common plugs and sockets see unusual and obsolete plugs and sockets.
Domestic power plugs and sockets are devices that connect the home appliances and portable light fixtures commonly used in homes to the commercial power supply so that electric power can flow to them. Power plugs are male electrical connectors that fit into female electrical sockets. They have contacts that are pins or blades which connect mechanically and electrically to holes or slots in the socket. Plugs usually have a live or hot contact, a neutral contact, and an optional earth or ground contact. Many plugs make no distinction between the live and neutral contacts, and in some cases they have two live contacts. The contacts may be brass, tin or nickel plated. Power sockets are female electrical connectors that have slots or holes which accept the pins or blades of power plugs inserted into them and deliver electricity to the plugs. Sockets are usually designed to reject any plug which is not built to the same electrical standard. Some sockets have one or more pins that connect to holes in the plug. |
| Standard wire colours for flexible cable | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Region | Live | Neutral | Protective earth/ground |
| EU, Australia & South Africa (IEC 60446) | brown | blue | green & yellow |
| Australia & New Zealand (AS/NZS 3000:2000 3.8.1) | red | black | green/yellow |
| UK, Ireland & Australia before 1969 | red | black | green |
| United States and Canada | black (brass) | white (silver) | green (green) |
| Standard wire colours for fixed cable | |||
| Region | Live | Neutral | Protective earth/ground |
| EU (IEC 60446) including UK from 31 March 2004 | black, brown and grey (respectively to phases order) | blue | green & yellow |
| UK before 1 April 2006 & Australia | red | black | green & yellow (core is usually bare and should be sleeved at terminations) |
| United States and Canada | black, red, blue(brass) | white (silver) | green or bare (green) |
| Note: the colours in this table represent the most common and preferred standard colours however others may be in use, especially in older installations. | |||
The three contacts
In most countries, household power is single-phase electric power, in which a single live conductor brings alternating current into a house, and a neutral returns it to the power supply. Many plugs and sockets include a third contact used for a protective earth ground, which only carries current in case of a fault in the connected equipment.Live or Phase
The live contact (also known as phase, hot or active), along with the neutral contact, carries power from the power source to the equipment. The voltage between them varies by country, as set by national standards. In some installations, there may be two live conductors, either being two phases from a three-phase system or being both phases from a split phase system. Some plug/socket combinations are designed in a way that a plug can be inserted only one possible way — this is referred to as a polarized plug (not to be confused with positive and negative polarity). Others allow the plug to be inserted with live and neutral either way round — this is referred to as an unpolarized plug. Furthermore even if live and neutral can only connect one way, in some countries it is common to wire them without regard for which is which. This will be hazardous with equipment that connects the neutral to the case..Neutral
The neutral contact, along with a live contact, completes the circuit between the power source and equipment. It is chosen as the zero voltage reference point, with the live contact's voltage measured with respect to it. In many cases local electrical regulations require the neutral to be connected to earth ground. In such systems even though the neutral conductor is at a very low voltage with respect to ground, it is insulated for the full supply voltage in case of a fault such as a break in the wiring between netural and source. Another possibility is that the live and neutral may be reversed or crossed by improper installation.Neutral and earth (ground) are closely related and are usually connected at some point. However, extra connections between the neutral and the earth should be avoided unless the relevant jurisdiction's regulations allow it. Connecting neutral and earth at more than one point can sometimes create a dangerous ground loop in the system.
Earth/Ground
- For more details on this topic, see Earthing system.
It is a common misconception that the purpose of the earth connection is to take fault currents safely to earth. The primary purpose of the earthing system is to cause a fuse to blow or a breaker or a residual-current device (RCD) to trip to automatically disconnect the power supply to any device or cable which develops a wiring fault. The secondary purpose is to hold all touchable metal in a house to the same voltage to prevent electrical shocks when touching two metal objects at the same time. In addition, some equipment such as surge protectors require an earth connection to function properly because they operate by shorting the excess current to the earth.
There are two main approaches to the problem of how to disconnect power when a live wire comes into contact with metalwork attached to the earthing system. One way is to get the resistance through the fault path and back to the supply very low by having a metallic connection from the earth back to the supply transformer (a TN system). Then when a fault happens a very high current will flow rapidly blowing a fuse (or tripping a circuit breaker).
Where such a direct connection is not used (a TT system) the resistance of the fault path back to the supply is almost invariably far higher and as a result the fault current is generally too low to reliably blow fuses (or trip circuit breakers). Therefore an RCD must normally be used to disconnect the fault.
The neutral core could in theory be used as a ground, but this would be dangerous if the core broke, so this is not normally used in building wiring or portable appliances. It is, however, used in some other situations with special precautions. For instance, in Switzerland, sockets in houses with the old two wire installation have the ground and neutral contacts connected together, probably supposing that the professionally maintained house installation is much more reliable than plugged-in device. Also using the neutral as a ground prevents the use of RCDs.
Differences in terminology
There are significant differences between American English and British English in talking about power plugs and sockets.| British English | American English | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| mains power | line power | House electrical power supply |
| earth connection | ground connection | Safety connection to the earth or ground |
| flex/mains lead | cord | Flexible electric cable from plug to appliance |
| socket, power point | outlet, receptacle, socket | Female part of an electrical connection |
| pin | prong or plug | Male part of an electrical connector |
In the United States, the live contact may be called live or hot. The neutral contact may be called cold, neutral, return, the grounded conductor, or (in the National Electrical Code), the identified conductor. The earth contact is called ground or the grounding conductor.
In the United Kingdom the word "line" is occasionally used to denote the live terminal or wire. This terminology derives from its being at the line voltage relative to neutral and ground, as distinct from the "phase" voltage, between lines on different phases of the supply.
Live conductors are called phases when there is more than a single phase in use. Pins are also known as prongs, contacts or terminals.
In Australia, the live contact is called active.
History of plugs and sockets
When electricity was first introduced into the household, it was primarily used for lighting. At that time, many electricity companies operated a split-tariff system where the cost of electricity for lighting was lower than that for other purposes. This led to low-power appliances (such as vacuum cleaners and hair driers) being connected to the light fitting. The picture to the right shows a 1909 electric toaster with a light bulb socket plug.U.S. Patent 774,250. The first electric power plug and receptacle.
[3]
The three prong plug was invented in 1928 by Philip F. Labre, while he was going to school at the Milwaukee School of Engineering (MSOE). It is said that his landlady had a cat which would knock over her fan when it came in the window. When she plugged the fan back in, she would get an electric shock. Philip figured out that if the plug was grounded, the electricity would go to earth through the plug rather than his landlady. He applied for and was issued a patent for grounding receptacle and plug on June 5 1928.[4] As the need for safer installations became apparent, earthed three-contact systems were made mandatory in most industrial countries.
Proliferation of standards
During the first fifty years of commercial use of electric power, standards developed rapidly based on growing experience. Technical, safety, economy, and economic factors influenced the development of all wiring devices and a number of different varieties were invented. Gradually, original concepts were dropped and the desire for trade between countries eliminated some standards that had been used only in a few countries. Former colonies of countries may retain the standards of the colonizing country, occasionally (as with the UK and a number of its former colonies) after the colonizing country has changed its standard. Sometimes offshore industrial plants or overseas military bases use the wiring practices of their controlling country instead of the surrounding country. In some countries there is no single national standard and multiple voltages, frequencies and plug designs are in use, creating extra complexity and potential safety problems for users.In recent years many countries have settled on one of a few de facto standards, although there are legacy installations of obsolete wiring in most countries of the world. Some buildings have wiring that has been in use for almost a century and which pre-dates all modern standards.
To minimize the difficulty of designing for different national standards, many manufacturers of electrical devices like personal computers have adopted the practice of putting a single world-standard IEC connector on the device, and supplying for each country a power cord equipped with a standard IEC connector on one end and a national power plug at the other. The device itself is designed to adapt to a wide range of voltage and frequency standards. This has the practical benefit of reducing the amount of testing required for approval, and reduces the number of different product variations that must be produced to serve world markets.
World maps by plug/socket and voltage/frequency
- See also:
Countries on other continents have adopted one of these two voltage standards, although some countries use variations or a mixture of standards. The outline maps show the different plug types, voltages and frequencies used around the world,[5] colour-coded for easy reference.
Types of plug and sockets
Electrical plugs and their sockets differ by country in shape, size and type of connectors. The type used in each country is set by national standards legislation.[6] In this article each type is designated by a letter designation from a U.S. government publication [1], plus a short comment in parentheses giving its country of origin and number of contacts. Subsections then detail the subtypes of each type as used in different parts of the world.Note that IEC Class I refers to earthed equipment. IEC Class II refers to unearthed equipment protected by double insulation. See Appliance classes.
Type A (North American/Japanese 2-pin)
- NEMA 1-15 (North American 15 A/125 V ungrounded)
Early designs could be inserted either way, but some modern ones prevent the neutral pin from being inserted into the live socket by making it wider than the live one, referred to as a polarized plug. (Note that this is not the same as positive/negative polarization in a direct current system.) New polarized plugs will not fit in old type A sockets, but both old and new type A plugs will fit in new type A and type B sockets. Some devices that do not distinguish between neutral and live, such as sealed electronic power supplies, are still sold with both pins narrow. When attaching a new polarized plug to a cord, it is useful to remember that the most common type of two-conductor cord for low-power use in North America has smooth insulation on the "hot" side and ribbed insulation on the "neutral" side.
- JIS C 8303, Class II (Japanese 15 A/100 V ungrounded)
Some older Japanese outlets and multiplug adapters are non-polarized -- the slots in the sockets are the same size - and will only accept non-polarized plugs. Japanese plugs should be able to fit into modern North American outlets without trouble, but North American appliances with polarized plugs may require adapters or replacement non-polarized plugs to connect to older Japanese outlets; or even replacement of the wall socket itself.
Japanese standard wire sizes and the resulting current ratings are somewhat different from those used elsewhere in the world. Japanese voltage is only 100 volts - lower than American voltage - and the frequency in eastern Japan is only 50 hertz instead of 60, so even if a North American plug can be inserted into a Japanese socket, it does not always mean the device will work properly.
Type B (American 3-pin)
- NEMA 5-15 (North American 15 A/125 V grounded)
The type B plug has two flat parallel blades like type A, but has a round ground or earthing pin (American standard NEMA 5-15/Canadian standard CSA 22.2, N°42).[7] It is rated for 15 amperes at 125 volts. The ground pin is longer than the live and neutral blades, so the device is grounded before the power is connected. The neutral blade in the type B socket is wider than the live one to prevent type A plugs being inserted upside-down, but type B plugs often have both pins narrow since the ground pin enforces polarity.
The 5-15 socket is standard in all of North America (Canada, the United States and Mexico). It is also used in Central America, the Caribbean, northern South America (Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela and part of Brazil), Japan, Taiwan and Saudi Arabia.
With type B outlets, if you look directly at the outlet with the ground at the bottom, the neutral slot is on the left, and the live slot is on the right. They may also be installed with the ground at the top or on either side, but the pinout going clockwise, starting with the ground, are always ground, neutral, live. If the plug is polarized, the widest pin is the neutral connector.
Due to the low power (1.8 kW) available from a 120 V 15A socket a number of other NEMA connectors for higher currents and 240 V supplies are also commonly encountered in North American homes.
- JIS C 8303, Class I (Japanese 15 A/100 V grounded)
Type C (European 2-pin)
(Not to be confused with the 3-blade C13 and C14 IEC connectors)- CEE 7/16 (Europlug 2.5 A/250 V unearthed)
- For more details on this topic, see Europlug.
The Europlug is used in Class II applications throughout continental Europe (Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, Greece, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Spain, Portugal, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Iceland, Slovenia, Poland, The Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Turkey, Bulgaria). It is also used in Middle East, most of Africa, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Peru, Bolivia, Brazil, Bangladesh, Indonesia as well as the former Soviet republics, and many developing nations.
This plug is intended for use with devices that require 2.5 A or less. Because it can be inserted in either direction into the socket, live and neutral are connected at random.
The separation and length of the pins allow its safe insertion in most CEE 7/17, French type E, Type H (Israeli 3-pin), CEE 7/4 (Schuko), CEE 7/7 and Type L (Italian 3-pin) outlets.
- CEE 7/17 (German/French 16 A/250 V unearthed)
- BS 4573 (UK shaver)
- Variations in sockets
Type D (Old British 3-pin)
- For more details on this topic, see BS 546.
- BS 546 (Indian 5 A/250 V earthed)
- BS 546 (South African 15 A/250 V earthed)
Type E (French 2-pin, female earth)
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- French type E
As with the German plug below this plug will fit some other types of socket either easily or with force. However, there is no earth connection with such sockets! Also in some cases if the plug is forced in, the socket may be damaged when the plug is removed.
Type F (German 2-pin, side clip earth)
- CEE 7/4 (German "Schuko" 16 A/250 V earthed)
- For more details on this topic, see Schuko.
"Schuko" is an abbreviation for the German word Schutzkontakt, which means "Protective (that is, earthed) contact".
Although Schuko sockets are unpolarized, it is recommended to wire them the same way French sockets are wired (live on left and neutral on right, when looking at the socket) for consistency and to be able to plug universal CEE 7/7 plugs in polarized fashion when needed (observing that the female ground receptacle on the plug is on top).
- Gost 7396 (Russian 10 A/250 V earthed)
- For more details on this topic, see GOST 7396.
Many official standards in Eastern Europe are virtually identical to the Schuko standard. One of the protocols governing the reunification of Germany required that the DIN and VDE standards would prevail without exception, so the former East Germany had to conform to the Schuko standard. Most other Eastern European countries use the Schuko standard internally but, prior to its collapse, they exported large volumes of appliances to the Soviet Union with the Soviet standard plug installed. Because of that, many of the Russian plugs found their way into other Eastern European countries.
Type E and F hybrid
- CEE 7/7 (French/German 16 A/250 V earthed)
In order to bridge the differences between sockets E and F, the CEE 7/7 plug was developed. It has earthing clips on both sides to connect with the CEE 7/4 socket and a female contact to accept the earthing pin of the type E socket. Nowadays, when appliances are sold with type E/F plugs attached, the plugs are CEE 7/7 and non-rewirable. This means that the plugs are now identical between countries like France and Germany; only the sockets are different.
Type E and F plugs that are not compatible with both types of socket are only found if a cheap replacement plug has been attached to a cord that originally had another plug. Better-quality replacements are standard CEE 7/7 and are compatible with both Schuko and French standard sockets.
Note that the CEE 7/7 plug is polarized to prevent the live and neutral connections from being reversed when used with a type E outlet, but allows polarity reversal when inserted into a type F socket. The plug is rated at 16 A. Above that, equipment must either be wired permanently to the mains or connected via another higher power connector such as the IEC 309 system.
Type G (Irish/Malta/British 3-pin)
- BS 1363 (Irish/British 13 A/230-240 V 50 Hz earthed and fused)
- For more details on this topic, see BS 1363.
The plug is unusual in that it has a fuse inside, for protection, in addition to a circuit breaker in the distribution panel. The fuse is required to protect the cord, as British wiring standards allow very high-current circuits to the socket. Accepted practice is to choose the smallest standard fuse (3 A, 5 A, or 13 A) that will allow the appliance to function. Using a 13 A fuse on an appliance with thin cord is considered bad practice. The fuse is 1 inch long, conforming to standard BS 1362.
UK wiring regulations (BS 7671) require sockets in homes to have shutters over the live and neutral connections for safety reasons (e.g. to prevent children from inserting metal objects into them). These are incorporated into all BS 1363 sockets and are opened by the insertion of the (longer) earth pin. The shutters also help prevent the use of plugs made to other standards. On plugs for Class II appliances that do not require an earth, the pin is often plastic and serves only to open the shutters and to enforce the correct orientation of live and neutral. It is sometimes possible to open the shutters with a screwdriver to insert other plug types but this should be avoided as such plugs will not have a fuse.
Recently the UK standard specification has been altered from the old 240V AC to 230V AC to come into line with the rest of europe.
BS 1363 plugs and sockets started appearing in 1946 and BS 1363 was first published in 1947. By the end of the 1950s, it had replaced the earlier standard (type D) (BS 546) in new installations, and by the end of the 1960s, most earlier type D installations had been rewired to BS 1363 standards. Socket-outlets usually include switches on them for convenience. BS 1363 is considered a very safe system.
Type H (Israeli 3-pin)
- SI 32 (Israeli 16 A/250 V earthed)
This plug is also used in the areas controlled by the Palestinian National Authority in the West Bank and all of the Gaza Strip
Type I (Australian/New Zealand & Chinese/Argentine 2/3-pin)
- AS 3112 (Australian 10 A/240 V)
- For more details on this topic, see AS 3112.
There are several AS/NZS 3112 plug variants,[13] including one with a wider earth pin used for devices drawing up to 15 A; sockets supporting this pin will also accept 10 A plugs. There is also a 20 A variant, with all three pins oversized, and 25 and 32 A variants, with the 20 A larger pins and the earthing pin forming an inverted "L" for the 25 A and a horizontal "U" for the 32 A (the 5 variants {10; 15; 20; 25 & 32 ampere sockets} will accommodate all the plugs that are equal or of a lesser current carrying capacity, but not a higher value; i.e. a 10 A plug will be accommodated by all sockets but a 20 A plug will fit only 20, 25 and 32 A outlets).
Australia's standard plug/socket system was originally codified as standard C112 (floated provisionally in 1937, and adopted as a formal standard in 1938), which was superseded by AS 3112 in 1990. As of 2005, the latest major update is AS/NZS 3112:2004, which mandated insulated pins[14] by 2005. However, equipment and cords made before 2003 can still be used.
- CPCS-CCC (Chinese 10 A/250 V)
Although the pins on the Chinese plug are 1 mm longer, the Australasian plug can be used with mainland Chinese socket. The standard for Chinese plugs and sockets is set out in GB 2099.1–1996 and GB 1002–1996. As part of China's commitment for entry into the WTO, the new CPCS (Compulsory Product Certification System) has been introduced, and compliant Chinese plugs have been awarded the CCC (China Compulsory Certification) Mark by this system. The plug is three wire, grounded, rated at 10 A, 250 V and used for Class 1 applications.
In China, the sockets are installed upside down relative to the Australian one shown in the picture.
China also uses American/Japanese "Type A" sockets and plugs for Class-II appliances. However, the voltage across the pins of a Chinese socket will always be 220, no matter what the plug type.
- IRAM 2073 (Argentine 10 A/250 V)
This plug is similar in appearance to the Australasian and Chinese plugs. The pin length is same as the Chinese version. The most important difference from the Australasian plug is that the Argentine plug is wired with the live and neutral contacts reversed.
Type J (Swiss 3-pin)
- SEV 1011 (Swiss 10 A/250 V)
Switzerland also has a two-pin plug, with the same pin shape, size and spacing as the SEV 1011's live and neutral pins, but with a more flattened hexagonal form. It fits into both Swiss sockets (round and hexagonal) and CEE 7/16 sockets, and is rated for up to 10 A.
- IEC 60906-1 (Brazilian 16 A/250 V)
- For more details on this topic, see IEC 60906-1.
Type K (Danish 3-pin)
- DS Afsnit 107-2-D1 (Danish 10 A/250 V)
Adapter plugs exist to allow connection of CEE 7/7 prongs to non-computer outlets. These usually are not sold at the local supermarket so visitors wishing to be safe should contact an electrician.
Since the early 1990s grounded outlets have been required in all new electric installations in Denmark.
After 1 July 2008 Type E (French 2-pin, female earth) will be permitted for installations in Denmark.
Type L (Italian 3-pin)
The Italian earthed plug/socket standard, CEI 23-16/VII, includes two models rated at 10 A and 16 A that differ in contact diameter and spacing. Both are symmetrical, allowing the live and neutral contacts to be inserted in either direction. CEE 7/16 (type C) unearthed Europlugs are also in common use, and standardized in Italy as CEI 23-5. Appliances with CEE 7/7 Schuko-French plugs are often sold in Italy, but not every socket will accept them. Adapters are cheap and commonly used to connect CEE 7/7 plugs to CEI 23-16/VII sockets.- CEI 23-16/VII (Italian 10 A/250 V)
- CEI 23-16/VII (Italian 16 A/250 V)
- Variations in sockets
The other type looks like a type F socket, but adds a central grounding hole. This design accepts CEE 7/7 (type E/F) plugs, in addition to type C and type L 10 A plugs; its disadvantage is that it is twice as large as a normal type L socket. Some of these sockets also have extra holes to accept type L 16 A plugs.
Older installations often have sockets that are limited to either the 10 A or the 16 A style plug, requiring the use of an adapter if the other style needs to be connected.
Type M (see D)
- BS 546 (South African 15 A/250 V)
A standard grounded Thai outlet supporting American and European 2-pin plugs, and also earthed American plugs
Multi standard sockets
Sockets that take a variety of incompatible plug types are often seen in developing countries where electrical standards are either lacking or unenforced. These sockets may accept both 120 V and 240 V plugs raising a significant risk of devices being damaged by the wrong voltage. Sometimes they have one or more earth holes to allow 3-pin plugs, but there is a good chance that the ground contact may not actually be connected to earth and the ground contact certainly will not mate with Schuko or French plugs. Great care should be taken to avoid incompatible voltage and grounding connections when using such outlets. Multi-standard devices designed to auto-adapt to different voltage and frequency standards, and devices which do not require a ground contact are best used with these sockets.Safety notes
Connecting a plug or socket may seem simple, but if done improperly, can result in a working but highly dangerous installation. Portable electrical devices are designed and approved to work with a particular electrical system, so interchanging devices between systems requires knowledge of the basis of approval. The main issues are:- Connecting live wire to the ground contact. This is very dangerous because the conductive case is made live and the appliance may cause death at any time. It is insidious because the appliance may still work.
- Not earthing an appliance that should be earthed. This is dangerous because the appliance case will remain live if there is a fault between the live wire and the conductive case. This can happen through the use of European plug types with non-pin earth connections, through the use of adaptors or through sockets which have earth contacts but not any connection from those earth contacts to earth. In some countries installing a RCD (GFCI) is considered an acceptable substitute for proper earthing when upgrading existing installations; however a RCD or GFCI is for protection against electrical shock only, and does not provide the control of electromagnetic noise provided by a true earth ground connection.
- Swapping live and neutral wires. In many countries this is not regarded as an error and it is perfectly feasible to design appliances such that they will be safe (e.g. by using double pole switches and protection devices) under this condition. However, if appliances are intended for use only in countries that take care to avoid live/neutral swaps then they may have only a single pole switch which on live-neutral reversal will end up in the neutral wire, leaving portions of the device live at all times. This does not pose immediate danger but increases the risk of shock if there is another fault or if someone tries to work on the appliance without disconnecting it. However, if the appliance is a light fixture with an Edison screw base, the threaded shell of the lamp base will be connected to the live wire instead of the neutral, greatly increasing the risk of electric shock when changing light bulbs.
- Swapping ground and neutral wires for an appliance. This can cause a number of issues. In a TT earthing system it will mean that significant current will go down the earth rod and may lead to significant voltages between the case of the faulty appliance and other correctly wired appliances. In a TN-S or TN-C-S system immediate danger is unlikely, but there is still the potential for danger if a neutral or earth wire also breaks. If this fault were combined with a live-neutral swap further back in the circuit, live current could be supplied to the earth pin.
- Not providing adequate overcurrent/short circuit protection which would result in a far greater possibility of fire in the event of a fault.
See also
- DC connector
- Double insulated
- IEC connector
- Electricity
- Electric power
- Extension cable
- Ground and neutral
- Industrial and multiphase power plugs and sockets
- List of countries with mains power plugs, voltages and frequencies
- Power connector
- Power cord
- Power strip
- Telephone plugs
References
Notes
1. ^ Hubbell (2006). Hubbell History. Hubbell Incorporated. Retrieved on 2006-10-10.
2. ^ Witte. The Automobile Storage Battery Its Care and Repair. www.powerstream.com. Retrieved on 2007-09-14.
3. ^ Crist. Socket Tutorial. www.mosaicshades.com. Retrieved on 2007-09-14.
4. ^ U.S. Patent 1,672,067
5. ^ Electric Current Abroad, U.S. Department of Commerce, International Trade Administration (2002), [2]
6. ^ IEC/TR 60083, Plugs and socket-outlets for domestic and similar general use standardized in member countries of IEC, International Electrotechnical Commission (2006)
7. ^ ANSI/NEMA WD6, Dimensional requirements for plugs and receptacles, National Electrical Equipment Manfacturers Association
8. ^ JIS C 8303-1993,Plugs and Receptacles for Domestic and Similar General Use,Japanese Standards Association (1993)
9. ^ EN 50075 (1991), Specification for flat non-wirable two-pole plugs 2.5 A 250 V, with cord, for the connection of class II-equipment for household and similar purposes, European Committee for Standardization (CEN)
10. ^ BS 4573 (1970),British Standard Specification for two-pin reversible plugs and shaver socket-outlets,British Standards Institution
11. ^ BS 1363 (1995), 13 A plugs, socket-outlets and adaptors. Specification for rewirable and non-rewirable 13 A fused plugs, British Standards Institute
12. ^ AS/NZS 3112:2004, Approval and test specification - Plugs and socket-outlets, Standards Australia and Standards New Zealand
13. ^ Australian Mains Plug Variants - AS/NZS 3112. Access Communications Pty Ltd (2007-04-19).
14. ^ Mains Plugs with Insulated Pins. Australian Standards AS/NZS3112:2000 & AS/NZS3112:2004 refer [sic]. Access Communications Pty Ltd (2007-04-19).
15. ^ International standardization of electrical plugs and sockets for domestic use. IEC.
16. ^ NBR 14136:2002 - Plugues e tomadas para uso doméstico e análogo – Padronização (Plugs and socket-outlets for household use and similar purposes - Specification)
17. ^ MacLeod, David; Provincial Chief Electrical Inspector (June 7 , 2005). 3 prong adapter plugs banned for sale in Nova Scotia. Province of Nova Scotia. Retrieved on 2006-12-08.
General
- The original content for this article came from http://users.pandora.be/worldstandards/electricity.htm.
- IEC/TR 60083: Plugs and socket-outlets for domestic and similar general use standardized in member countries of IEC. International Electrotechnical Commission, May 2004. This 359-page technical report describes all national standards for domestic plugs and sockets. Its 1963 predecessor, CEE Publication 7, covered only the plugs and sockets of continental Europe.
- IEC 60884: Plugs and socket-outlets for household and similar purposes. International Electrotechnical Commission. This international standard defines general safety and test requirements for domestic plugs and sockets, but not any particular shapes.
- IEC 60906: IEC system of plugs and socket-outlets for household and similar purposes. International Electrotechnical Commission. This international standard defines the domestic plugs and sockets that the IEC suggests as a potential future common world-wide standard.
- IEC 60906-1 defines standard 230 V plugs
- IEC 60906-2 defines standard 115 V plugs
- IEC 60906-3 defines standard 4-48 V low-voltage plugs
- Guidance Notes for the Electrical Products (Safety) Regulation (2001 Edition — with amendments), Electrical and Mechanical Services Department, Hong Kong http://www.emsd.gov.hk/emsd/eng/pps/pub_gng_reg01.shtml
External links
- Hubbell History - Invention of the power plug and outlet.
- Australian AS/NZS 3112 mains plug description and wiring
- Australian AS/NZS 3112 mains plug with insulated pins
- Australian AS/NZS 3112 mains plug variants
- IEC Zone: Plugs and sockets
- AC Power Cords
- Glossary of standards terms
- Steve Kropla's World Electric Guide
- http://www.starkelectronic.com/fzfv.htm
- Change to UK electrical wire colours 2004
- Household electrical safety handbook, Electrical and Mechanical Services Department, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government
- http://www.powerconnections.co.uk
- IEEE history of Australian power connectors (in MS Word format)
- Information on the electrical systems in use in most countries of the world
- International plug standards from travel-island.com
- Pictures and dimensions of various plug types
- Ungrounded plugs
- Grounded plugs
- IEC High temperature plugs
- South Africa Eskom - Wiring a Plug
- Diagrams of Adapter Plugs
In science and engineering, conductors, such as copper or aluminum, are materials with atoms have loosely held valence electrons. See electrical conduction.Conductors in context
..... Click the link for more information.Industrial and multiphase plugs and sockets provide a connection to the electrical mains rated at higher voltages and currents than domestic plugs and sockets. They are generally used when more than two current carrying conductors (Polyphase system), high currents and/or
..... Click the link for more information.This page covers those mains plugs and sockets which are not in common domestic use but do not count as industrial or multiphase either.Old Spanish sockets
Older buildings in Spain may have sockets that take a particular type of plug that has two flat contacts and a round
..... Click the link for more information.Home appliances are electrical/mechanical appliances which accomplish some household functions, such as cooking or cleaning.
Traditionally, home appliances are classified into:- Major appliances
..... Click the link for more information.light fixture or luminaire is an electrical device used to create artificial light or illumination. A complete lighting fixture unit consists of the light source or lamp, the reflector for directing the light, an aperture (with or without a lens), the outer shell or housing
..... Click the link for more information.mains usually refers to the general purpose alternating current (AC) electrical power supply (as in “I've connected the appliance to the mains”). The term is not usually used in the United States and Canada.
..... Click the link for more information.For delivered electrical power, see .Electric power is defined as the rate at which electrical energy is transferred by an electric circuit. The SI unit of power is the watt.
When electric current flows in a circuit with resistance, it does work.
..... Click the link for more information.male or female. The assignment is by direct analogy with genitalia and sexual intercourse; the part bearing one or more protrusions, or which fits inside the other, being designated male
..... Click the link for more information.An electrical connector is a conductive device for joining electrical circuits together. The connection may be temporary, as for portable equipment, or may require a tool for assembly and removal, or may be a permanent electrical joint between two wires or devices.
..... Click the link for more information.Brass is any alloy of copper and zinc; the proportions of zinc and copper can be varied to create a range of brasses, each of which has unique properties[1]. Note that in comparison bronze is principally an alloy of copper and tin.[2].
..... Click the link for more information.TIN may refer to:- Tax identification number
- Triangulated irregular network, a data structure used in a geographic information systems
See also
- Tin
This article is about the metallic chemical element.
..... Click the link for more information.2, 3
(mildly basic oxide)
Electronegativity 1.91 (Pauling scale)
Ionization energies
(more) 1st: 737.1 kJmol−1
2nd: 1753.0 kJmol−1
3rd: 3395 kJmol−1
Atomic radius 135 pm
Atomic radius (calc.
..... Click the link for more information.“EU” redirects here. For other uses, see EU (disambiguation).
..... Click the link for more information.Anthem
Advance Australia Fair [1]
Capital Canberra
Largest city Sydney
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.International standard IEC 60446 defines basic safety principles for identifying electrical conductors by colours or numerals, for example in electricity distribution wiring.
..... Click the link for more information.Ireland
Éire
Airlann <nowiki />
Northwest of continental Europe with Great Britain to the east.
Geography <nowiki/>
Location Western Europe <nowiki />
Archipelago
..... Click the link for more information.Motto
"In God We Trust" (since 1956)
"E Pluribus Unum" ("From Many, One"; Latin, traditional)
Anthem
..... Click the link for more information.This page is currently protected from editing until disputes have been resolved.
Protection is not an endorsement of the current [ version] ([ protection log]).
..... Click the link for more information.“EU” redirects here. For other uses, see EU (disambiguation).
..... Click the link for more information.International standard IEC 60446 defines basic safety principles for identifying electrical conductors by colours or numerals, for example in electricity distribution wiring.
..... Click the link for more information.March 31 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.Events
..... Click the link for more information.20th century - 21st century - 22nd century
1970s 1980s 1990s - 2000s - 2010s 2020s 2030s
2001 2002 2003 - 2004 - 2005 2006 2007
2004 by topic:
News by month
Jan - Feb - Mar - Apr - May - Jun
..... Click the link for more information.Motto
"Dieu et mon droit" [2] (French)
"God and my right"
Anthem
"God Save the Queen" [3]
..... Click the link for more information.April 1 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining. April 1 is most notable in the Western world for being April Fools' Day.
..... Click the link for more information.20th century - 21st century - 22nd century
1970s 1980s 1990s - 2000s - 2010s 2020s 2030s
2003 2004 2005 - 2006 - 2007 2008 2009
2006 by topic:
News by month
Jan - Feb - Mar - Apr - May - Jun
..... Click the link for more information.Anthem
Advance Australia Fair [1]
Capital Canberra
Largest city Sydney
..... Click the link for more information.Motto
"In God We Trust" (since 1956)
"E Pluribus Unum" ("From Many, One"; Latin, traditional)
Anthem
..... Click the link for more information.This page is currently protected from editing until disputes have been resolved.
Protection is not an endorsement of the current [ version] ([ protection log]).
..... Click the link for more information.In electrical engineering, single-phase electric power refers to the distribution of electric power using a system in which all the voltages of the supply vary in unison. Single-phase distribution is used when loads are mostly lighting and heating, with few large electric motors.
..... Click the link for more information.
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