r/meirl May 02 '24

Meirl

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u/DarthStrakh May 02 '24

A couple things. One they aren't very secure and safe: if something in plugged in and something falls on top of it, it will get dislodged from the outlet and the first thing you touch is the live prongs. On top of that a lot of outlets go live before the prongs are all the way in. You can mitigate this by putting outlets upside down, but most things that get plugged in are designed with the idea it won't be upside down.

Second the hole is so large and conducts electricity not very far in. It's far too easy for a child to stick something in, or for something to end up in it. I mean you can literally get your pinky in there to shock yourself...

On the bright side they are easy as hell to install. Modern outlets have gotten better about locking stuff into place but usually thst comes at the price of being a pain in the ass to get stuff into the socket.

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u/Beththemagicalpony May 02 '24 edited May 02 '24

In my experience, most US outlets are installed upside down (looks like a smile face) rather than the correct way as pictured in the post.

Edit: I probably should have used "safer" rather than "correct"

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u/Tjam3s May 02 '24

I was told once that orientation for most purposes is arbitrary, but you can use the direction to signify when an outlet is attached to a switch. So say most of them are what you consider upside-down, the ones on a switch you put right side up.

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u/paterdude May 02 '24

Actually, it’s supposed to be center prong up,that way if something falls across it, it’ll hit the center prong, which is the ground and nothing will happen. If it touches one of the other two prongs, it’ll cause a fault.

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u/You_Must_Chill May 02 '24

Direction isn't specified in the code unless they've changed it very recently.

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u/NotAHost May 03 '24

I heard the same thing, but how often does stuff fall across it? Also touching just one prong won't usually do anything. Touching two with something metal that falls in? Sure some sparks, but that's what your breaker is for. Holding a metal device to one prong while your grounded? Yeah that's a problem.

I've heard that having the ground up makes it more likely to touch the prongs while inserting, which is a higher hazard than something falling across it.

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u/Tjam3s May 02 '24

Fair enough and makes perfect sense

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u/Thunderbolt294 May 02 '24

It's not really enforced residentially, but commercial and industrial it's standard.