D
Don Pearce
Not legal in the US but you do find were some Bozo does it, after the
inspection.
Er - how do you do that in the US? You don't have ring mains, so you
don't have two wires.
d
Not legal in the US but you do find were some Bozo does it, after the
inspection.
Some towns are built on so much rock that you need explosives to dig a
trench. You had to get a blasting permit to set a pole in Cincinnati.
All those poles were tagged. RIP. (Replace In Place.)
Not legal in the US but you do find were some Bozo does it, after the
inspection.
Do you ever think, before posting? Someone adds another circuit, and
is too cheap to buy another breaker. Or the box is full, and they won't
upgrade.
Michael A. Terrell said:Do you ever think, before posting? Someone adds another circuit, and
is too cheap to buy another breaker. Or the box is full, and they won't
upgrade.
Yes. How else would they do it, if you can't use two wires under one
screw?
The green screw on the lower left is for the 'Ground' connection. The
silver colored screws on the left side are 'Neutral', and the brass
colored screws on the right side are 'Line'.
<http://www.homedepot.com/catalog/productImages/400/b9/b947022d-7720-42fd-97e2-af3be83c2250_400.jpg>
Looks like the sort of thing you'd see in the UK from before WW2. From the
cheapest of makers.
I wouldn't have believed that sort of screw connection was still in use.
It's a dreadful way of making a connection. Unless you first crimp on a
suitable terminal.
Then it's a damn good thing you don't do electrical work in the US,
isn't it?
What you can't see is that there are grooved slots in the
terminal that grip the wire, when the screw is tightened.
'Crimps' are
illegal, without certified tools with current inspection tags & proper
training.
They are used in the few places with aluminum wire, to crip a
copper pigtail onto the aluminum wire, and every part of the process is
tightly controlled. Either hire the right work, or rewire the building
with copper.
Sigh. Such arrogant ignorance. You've never seen one, or used on,
but all you can do is find fault with them.
Arny said:When these places were wired (1910-1935), underground wiring was
prohibitively expensive. Underground became the rule in the 70's.
Most of that happened down south and is called the TVA (Tennessee Valley
Authority). The TVA turned out to be a very strategic resource - it
provided massive amounts of power to the Oak Ridge uranium refining
facility.
The Hoover Dam in Nevada and the Grand Coulee dam in Washington state
were also built at about the same time. The Grand Coulee Dam provided
massive amounts of electric power to the Hanford plutonium refining
facility.
Michael A. Terrell said:From what I've
seen of European connectors, I wouldn't use one anywhere. We had to use
them in the Earth Stations we built for the European Space Agency. We
had them ship us what they wanted used, then had to fight with it to
find enough usable hardware. The outlets we used on US turnkey were
steel Wiremold outlet strips. They sent us pairs of sockets that had to
be wired and mounted inside the racks. It looked like the crap imported
from China for flea markets. No inspect for US use, and the connectors
are incompatible with the US market. Some had a tiny expanded scale 250
voltmeter that displayed 200 to 250 volts. They wondered why only
foreign tourist were buying the crap.
They'll email you in advance with the details of what they're going toI use Lidl for some things. Not fresh vegetables, though. Or meat. Dairy
products are good value as are most other non fresh things.
Their tools in general are excellent - far better than budget stuff
elsewhere. But are only ever on special offer so you need to look out for
them. Don't have an Aldi anywhere close.
Michael A. Terrell said:Where did I say that they were?
Isn't that obvious? They wanted what they are used to using.
When have you ever seen brand new, custom built US $8,000,000 earth
stations for sale at a flea market? You are in such a hurry to find
fault that you don't bother to consider the meaning of the text.
You are still being vague. What foreign tourists, and what were they buying?'Foreign tourists' here on vacation were buying them in Florida and
taking them to Europe because they were a lot cheaper than similar items
in the UK.
Since China sold them.
You appear to think that I am deliberately finding fault with your post. I'mI could probably go to a flea market and
take a picture of one, if you need convinced that they exist. Even
then, you would probably claim they were fakes.![]()
Why change it? They have a damn good safety record, and there are over
a billion in use. Just because someone outside the US dislikes them is
no reason to change. There are multiple grades, from what I linked, to
medical grade with extreme low leakage. There are commercial grade,
intended for heavy usage. Think about it. Most plugs are rarely
inserted or removed, and the standard duty is fine.
Some items are only
plugged in one time, and used till the item is worn out. From what I've
seen of European connectors, I wouldn't use one anywhere. We had to use
them in the Earth Stations we built for the European Space Agency. We
had them ship us what they wanted used, then had to fight with it to
find enough usable hardware. The outlets we used on US turnkey were
steel Wiremold outlet strips. They sent us pairs of sockets that had to
be wired and mounted inside the racks. It looked like the crap imported
from China for flea markets. No inspect for US use, and the connectors
are incompatible with the US market. Some had a tiny expanded scale 250
voltmeter that displayed 200 to 250 volts. They wondered why only
foreign tourist were buying the crap.
The UK outlet is actually slightly less well-accepted than the US
outlet.
This all seems as pointless as Dave's slagging-off of US sockets.
Another difference between us! Here the analog was/is kept broadcast????
Analog TV, what's that? ;-)
AFAIK, we haven't had analog TV broadcast anywhere in the US since June
2009. I know that in theory, US broadcasters have into 2015 to make the
switch, but in reality the switchover was highly pervasive on the first day
possible, not the last.
But you've got to remember that this is the country that kept 405-line
going for, I think, longer after 625 started than it had been going
before that.
Erm, 405 started before the war and was alone until 1964? Then it
continued for another 20 years?