AC power plugs and sockets are devices for
removably connecting electrically-operated devices to the
commercial power supply.
An
electric plug is a
male electrical connector with contact
prongs to connect mechanically and electrically to slots in the
matching female socket.
Wall sockets (sometimes also known as
power points,
power sockets,
electric receptacles, or
electrical
outlets) are female electrical connectors that have slots
or holes which accept and deliver current to the prongs of inserted
plugs. To reduce the risk of injury or death by
electric shock, some plug and socket systems
incorporate various safety features. Sockets are designed to accept
only matching plugs and reject all others.
Terminology
There are substantial differences between
American and
British nomenclature related to power plugs and
sockets.
| British English |
American English |
Meaning |
| mains power |
line power |
The primary electrical power supply wires entering a building,
connected to the Main fuse or circuit
breakers. |
| domestic power |
|
Single-phase 230 V power as used in a single-family
residence |
| earth connection |
ground or grounding connection |
Safety connection to the earth or ground |
| live connection |
hot or live connection |
Phase ("active") connection |
| neutral connection |
cold or neutral connection |
return connection |
| flex/mains lead, mains wire/wiring |
line cord/power cord |
Flexible electric cable from plug to appliance |
| pin, (plug) |
pin, prong, blade (plug) |
Male part of an electrical connector |
| socket |
socket, outlet, receptacle |
Female part of an electrical connector |
In the
United
States
, the live contact may be called live,
hot or ungrounded. The neutral contact may
be called
cold,
neutral,
return,
the
ground'ed
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. In electrical engineering,
the
line voltage is that between the live conductors of
the three-phase distribution system, while the
phase
voltage is that between live and neutral.
Live conductors are called
phases when there is more than
a single phase in use. Pins are also known as
prongs,
contacts,
blades, or
terminals.
In
Australia, the live contact is called
active.
The three contacts
Each receptacle has two or three wired contacts. The contacts may
be
steel or
brass, and
may be
plated with
zinc,
tin, or
nickel.The live contact carries current from the
source to the load. The neutral returns current to the source. Many
receptacles and plugs also include a third contact for a connection
to
earth ground, intended to
protect against insulation failure of the connected device.
Polarisation
Polarised plugs and sockets are those designed to connect
only in one orientation, so the live and neutral conductors of the
outlet are connected (respectively) to the live and neutral poles
of the appliance. Polarisation is maintained by the shape, size, or
position of plug pins and socket holes to ensure that a plug fits
only one way into a socket. This is so switches interrupt the live
wire. If the neutral wire were interrupted instead, the device
would be deactivated but its internal wiring would still be live.
This is a shock hazard; if the energised parts are touched, current
travels to earth through the body. Devices that especially present
this hazard include
toasters and other
appliances with exposed
heating
elements, which with reversed polarity can remain live even
when they are cool to the touch, and
screw-in light bulbs, which with reversed
polarity, exposed portions of the socket shell remain energised
even though the lamp is switched off.
Interchange of the live and neutral wires in the wiring behind the
walls or in the hookup of sockets defeats the safety purpose of
polarised sockets and plugs; a
circuit
tester can be used to detect swapped wires.
Unpolarised plugs and sockets are those which can connect
either way around, so live and neutral wires are connected at
random. Unpolarised plug/socket systems such as the
Europlug rely on device construction requirements
to avoid the shock hazards created by interchange of live and
neutral connections; for example,
double insulation, a particular
IP protection rating, or
double switching.
(Further information on the configuration of specific types of
polarised and unpolarised plugs is below in the section "Types in present use".)
History
Early history
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 portable appliances (such as vacuum
cleaners, electric fans, and hair driers) being connected to the
light fitting.

.
The first electric power plug and receptacle.
However, as electricity became a common method of lighting houses
and operating labour-saving appliances, a safe means of connection
to the electric system other than using a light socket was needed.
The original two pin electrical plug and socket were invented by
Harvey Hubbell and
patented in 1904. Other manufacturers adopted the
Hubbell pattern and by 1915 they were widespread, although in the
1920s and even later, household and light commercial equipment was
still powered through cables connected with Edison screw-base
adapters to lampholders.
The three-prong plug was invented by Philip F. Labre, while he was
attending 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. Labre figured out that if the
plug were grounded, the electricity would go to earth through the
plug rather than through his landlady. He applied for and was
issued a patent for grounding receptacle and plug on June 5, 1928.
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, and economic factors influenced the development of all
wiring devices and numerous varieties were invented. Gradually the
desire for trade eliminated some standards that had been used only
in a few countries. Former colonies may retain the standards of the
colonising country, occasionally—as with the UK and a number of its
former colonies — after the colonising 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 region. Hotels and airports may maintain
receptacles of foreign standards for the convenience of travellers.
Some countries have multiple voltages, frequencies and plug designs
in use, which can create inconvenience and safety hazards.
Design for safety
Design features and aspects of plugs and sockets have evolved to
reduce the risk of
electric shock and
equipment damage. Depending on the plug/socket system, safety
measures may include pin and slot configuration to permit only the
correct insertion of plug into socket, earth pins longer than power
pins so the device becomes earthed before power is connected,
insulated pin shanks to
reduce or eliminate live-contact exposure when a plug is partially
inserted in a socket, socket slot shutters that open only for the
correct plug, as well as inbuilt
fuse and switches.
Consolidation of standards
In recent years many countries have settled on one of a few
de
facto standards, which became formalised as official national
standards, although there remain older installations of obsolete
wiring in most countries. Some buildings have wiring that has been
in use for almost a century and which pre-dates all modern
standards.
There has been some movement towards consolidation of standards for
international interoperability. For example, the
CEE 7/7 plug (see below) has been adopted
in several European countries and is compatible with both Type E
and Type F sockets, while the unpolarised
Europlug is compatible with an even greater
proportion of European and other socket types.
IEC 60906-1 has been proposed as a common
standard for all 230-
V plugs and sockets
worldwide but has only been adopted in Brazil to date.
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
There are two basic standards for voltage and frequency in the
world. One is the North American standard of 110-120 volts at a
frequency of 60
Hz, which uses plugs A and B, and the other is the
European standard of 220-240 volts at 50 Hz, which uses plugs C
through M. The differences arose for historical reasons as
discussed in the article
Mains
electricity.
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, color-coded for easy
reference.
Types in present use
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. In this article each type is
designated by a letter designation from a U.S. government
publication , 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.
IEC Classes are assigned to
electrical devices depending on whether or not they are earthed and
the degree of insulation they incorporate. Class I, for example,
refers to earthed equipment, while class II refers to unearthed
equipment protected by
double
insulation.
Special purpose sockets may be found in industrial, commercial or
institutional buildings. These may be merely labelled or coloured,
or may have different arrangements of pins or keying provisions.
Some special-purpose systems are incompatible with general-purpose
lighting and appliances. Examples of systems using special purpose
sockets include:
- "clean" ground for use with computer systems,
- emergency power supply,
- uninterruptible power supply, for critical or life-support
equipment,
- isolated power for medical instruments,
- "balanced" or "technical" power used in audio and video
production studios,
- theatrical lighting
Depending on the nature of the system, special-purpose sockets may
just identify a reserved use of a system (for example, computer
power) or may be physically incompatible with utility sockets to
prevent use of unintendedequipment which could create electrical
noise or other problems for the intended equipment on the
line.
Type A

Unpolarised type A plug
- NEMA 1-15 (North American 15 A/125
V ungrounded)
-
Unusual American 5-receptacle Type A outlet, ca. 1928
This plug and socket, with two flat parallel non-coplanar blades
and slots, is used in most of
North
America and on the east coast of
South
America on devices not requiring a ground connection, such as
lamps and "double-insulated" small appliances. It has been adopted
by 38 countries outside North America , and is standardised in the
U.S. by the
National
Electrical Manufacturers Association. NEMA 1-15 sockets have
been prohibited in new construction in the United States and Canada
since 1962, but remain in many older homes and are still sold for
replacement. Type A plugs are still very common because they are
compatible with type B (three-prong) sockets.
Initially, the plug's prongs and the socket's slots were the same
height, so the plug could be inserted into the socket either way
around. Most sockets and plugs manufactured from the 1950s onward
are polarised by means of a neutral blade/slot wider than the live
blade/slot, so the plug can be inserted only the right way.
Polarised type A plugs will not fit in unpolarised type A sockets,
because both slots are narrow, but both unpolarised and polarised
type A plugs will fit in polarised type A sockets and in type B
(three-prong) sockets. Some devices that do not distinguish between
neutral and live, such as sealed
electronic power supplies, are still
produced with unpolarised type A pins (both narrow).

Japanese outlet with earthing post,
for a washing machine.
- JIS C 8303, Class II (Japanese 15 A/100
V ungrounded)
The
Japanese
plug and socket are identical to
NEMA 1-15. However, the Japanese system incorporates
stricter dimensional requirements for the plug housing, different
marking requirements, and mandatory testing and approval by
MITI
or JIS.
Many Japanese outlets and multiplug adapters are unpolarised — the
slots in the sockets are the same size — and will accept only
unpolarised plugs. Japanese plugs generally fit into most North
American outlets without trouble, but polarised North American
plugs may require adapters or replacement non-polarised plugs to
connect to older Japanese outlets. However, in Japan voltage is
supplied at only 100 volts and the frequency in eastern Japan is 50
rather than 60 Hz, so North American devices which can be plugged
into Japanese sockets may not function properly.
Type B
 |
 |
| NEMA 5-15 plug, left. Decorative-style duplex
outlet, center. Ordinary duplex outlet, right. |
- 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 or
U-shaped grounding prong (American
standard NEMA 5-15/
CSA 22.2, No.42). 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. Sometimes both current blades on type B plugs are narrow
since the ground pin enforces polarity. Type A plugs are also
compatible with type B sockets. In this case, the socket retains
polarity enforcement.
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
. Looking directly at a type B 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.
In some parts of the United States and all of Canada,
tamper-resistant outlets are now required in new construction.
These prevent contact by objects like keys or paper clips inserted
into the receptacle.
In the
theater, this connector is
sometimes known as
PBG for "Parallel Blade with Ground",
Edison or
Hubbell, the name of a common
manufacturer.
- NEMA 5-20 (North American 20 A/125 V grounded)
In new residential construction since about 1992 , a 20-amp
receptacle with a T-slot for the neutral blade allows either
15-ampere parallel blade plugs or 20-ampere plugs to be used.
- JIS C 8303, Class I (Japanese 15 A/100 V grounded)
Japan also uses a Type B plug similar to the North American one.
However it is less common than its Type A equivalent.
Type C

CEE 7/16 plug and
socket
(Not to be confused with the 3-blade C13 and C14 IEC connectors)
- CEE 7/16 (Europlug 2.5 A/250 V ungrounded)
This two-prong plug is popularly known as the
Europlug. The plug is ungrounded and has two round
pins, which usually converge slightly towards their free ends.
It is
described in CEE 7/16 and is also defined in Italian
standard
CEI 23-5 and Russian
standard
GOST 7396. This plug is intended
for use with devices that require 2.5 amps or less. Because it is
unpolarised, it can be inserted in either direction into the
socket, so live and neutral are connected at random. The separation
and length of the pins allow its safe insertion in most CEE 7/17,
Type E ,
type F ,
Type H ,
CEE
7/7,
Type J , Type K (Danish) and
Type L outlets, as well as BS 4573 UK shaver
sockets. It can be forced into
type D (5
amp) and
G sockets, though the connection
may be neither reliable nor safe.
The Europlug (plug only, not socket from the picture) is used in
Class II applications throughout continental Europe (Austria,
Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Croatia,
Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Greenland,
Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia,
the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia,
Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey and
Ukraine). It is also used in the Middle East, most of African
nations, South America (Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, Peru and Bolivia),
Asia (Bangladesh, Indonesia and Pakistan) as well as Russia and the
former Soviet republics, such as Armenia, Georgia, and many
developing nations. It is also used alongside the BS 1363 in many
nations, particularly former British colonies.

CEE 7/17 plug
- CEE 7/17 (German/French 16 A/250 V ungrounded)
This plug also has two round pins but the pins are in diameter like
types E and F and the plug has a round plastic or rubber base that
stops it being inserted into small sockets intended for the
Europlug. Instead, it fits only into large round sockets intended
for types E and F. The base has holes in it to accommodate both
side contacts and socket earth pins. It is used for large
appliances, and in South Korea for all domestic non-earthed
appliances. It is also defined in Italian standard CEI 23-5.
Can also be safely inserted in to Israeli type H sockets, although
with some difficulty.

BS 4573 socket
- BS 4573 (UK shaver)
In the
United
Kingdom
and Ireland
, what appears to be a larger version of the
type C plug exists for use with shavers (electric razors) in bath or shower rooms. In fact it was
not derived from the type C plug at all, but was a legacy from
the obsolete 2 pin 5 amp plug used in Britain in the 1920s and
1930s but still prevalent, especially in bathrooms, as late as the
1960s. It has diameter pins apart, and the sockets for this plug
are often designed to accept unearthed CEE 7/16, US or
Australian plugs as well. Sockets are often able to supply either
230V or 115V. In wet zones, they must contain an
isolation transformer compliant with
BS 3535.
- Soviet plug (6 A/250 V ungrounded)
The Soviet plug, still widely used in modern Russia, has pin
dimensions and spacing equal to the Europlug, but lacks the
insulation sleeves. It has a round body like the French type E or
flat body with a round base like CEE7/17. The round base has no
notches. The pins are parallel and do not converge. The body is
made of fire resistant
thermoset
plastic.
There were also moulded rubber plugs available similar to CEE7/17,
but with a round base without any notches. They could be altered to
fit a CEE7/17 socket by cutting notches with a sharp knife.
Image:Soviet Plug Type1 6A 250V.jpg|Soviet grip plug, 6A 250V AC,
thermoset plasticImage:Soviet Plug Type2 6A 250V.jpg|Soviet round
plug, 6A 250V AC, thermoset plastic, half heightImage:Soviet
moulded rubber plugs 6A 250V cut.jpg|Moulded rubber soviet plugs
cut with knife in attempt to be similar to CEE 7/16 (left) and CEE
7/17 (right). Originally the plugs had a round base.Image:Soviet
shaver power cord.jpg|Soviet shaver power cord. The plug is similar
to CEE7/16, but has different configuration. Thermoplastic plug is
rated for 6A 250V.
- Europlug in Russian popular culture
In Russia "Europlug" (as pronounced in English), is always called a
"conventional" plug, along with the Soviet plug. "Evrovilka"
("Евровилка", which means "Europlug" in the Russian language)
almost always refers to the
Schuko
plug.

Unearthed socket compatible with both
Schuko and French plugs
- Variations in sockets
Type C sockets have no ground provisions and consequently have been
phased out in some countries. For example, in Germany, ungrounded
outlets are rare, found only in very old installations, whereas in
the Netherlands they are common in "dry areas" such as in bedrooms
or living rooms. Standards also vary between countries as to
whether child-resistant shutters are required. Depending on the
country and the age of the socket these sockets may have 4.0 or
4.8mm receptacles. The latter accept type E and F plugs in addition
to type C, though without ground connection. Countries using the
type E or F standards vary in whether ungrounded type C outlets are
still permitted in environments where the need for grounding is
less critical. Adaptors and trailing sockets and power strips
designed to accept only Europlugs with pins may also have plastic
barriers in place to prevent CEE 7/17,
Schuko
or French plugs from entering.
Type D
- BS 546 (United Kingdom, 5 A/250 V grounded), equivalent to
IA6A3 (India), rated at 6A / 250V

D Plug
India
and Pakistan
have standardised on a plug which was originally
defined in British standard BS 546. It
has three large round pins in a triangular pattern. The BS 546
standard is also used in parts of the Middle East (Kuwait, Qatar)
and parts of Asia and South East Asia that were electrified by the
British. This type was also previously used in
South Africa, but has been phased out in favour
of the 15 A version there.
Similarly, in Ghana
, Kenya
and Nigeria
, the plug
has been mostly replaced by the British 3-pin (Type G). This
5 A plug, along with its smaller 2 A cousin, is sometimes used in
the UK for centrally switched domestic lighting circuits, in order
to distinguish them from normal power circuits.
- BS 546 (United Kingdom, 15 A/250 V grounded), equivalent to
IA16A3 (India) & SABS 164 (South Africa), rated at 16A /
250V

M Plug
This plug is sometimes referred to as type M, but it is in fact
merely the 15 A version of the plug above, though its pins are much
larger at . Live and neutral are spaced apart, and earth is away
from each of them.
Although the 5 A version is standard in
India
, Pakistan
, Sri
Lanka
, Nepal
and Namibia
, the 15 A version is also used in these countries
for larger appliances. Some countries like
South Africa use it as the main domestic plug
and socket type, where sockets always have an on–off switch built
into them.
Type M is still commonly found in
installations in Hong
Kong
and Botswana
, alongside type G. The Type M was almost
universally used in the UK and Ireland for indoor dimmable theatre
and architectural lighting installations, but there is now a
widespread move to using CEE 16 A industrial sockets in new
installations. It was also often used for non-dimmed but centrally
controlled sockets within such installations. The main reason for
doing this is that fused plugs, while convenient for domestic
wiring (as they allow 32 A socket circuits to be used safely), are
not convenient if the plugs and sockets are in hard-to-access
locations (like lighting bars) or if using chains of extension
cords since it is hard to figure out which fuse has blown. Both of
these situations are common in theatre wiring.
This plug is also
widely used in Israel
, Singapore
and Malaysia
for air
conditioners and clothes
dryers.
Type E

French socket

French plug
- French type E
France
, Belgium
, Poland
, Czech
Republic
, Slovakia
and some other countries have standardized on a
socket which is not compatible with the CEE 7/4 socket (type F) standard in Germany
and other continental European countries.
The reason for incompatibility is that grounding in the E socket is
done by a round male pin permanently mounted in the socket. Sockets
are installed with the earth pin upwards. Although the plug is
polarised, there is no universally observed standard for connecting
the live and neutral. The plug itself is round with two round pins
measuring , spaced apart and a hole for the socket's ground pin. It
will accept Europlug (type C) and CEE 7/17 plugs.
Like type F plug below, this plug will fit some other types of
socket either easily or with force. However, there will be no
ground connection with such sockets, and in some cases forcing the
plug may damage the socket.
Child-resistant outlet shutters are required by French and Belgian
standards, though are not required in all countries where this type
is used.
The type
has been authorised in Denmark
since 1 July 2008, but sockets of this kind are not
yet common.
Type F
- CEE 7/4 (German "Schuko" 16 A/250 V grounded)

Schuko plug and socket
The type F plug, defined in CEE 7/4 and commonly called a
"
Schuko plug", is like type E except that it
has two grounding clips on the sides of the plug instead of a
female ground contact. The Schuko connection system is symmetrical
and unpolarised by design, allowing live and neutral to be
reversed. The socket also accepts Europlugs and CEE 7/17
plugs. It supplies up to 16 Amperes.
It is used in
Austria
, Bulgaria
, Chile
, Croatia
, Finland
, Germany
, Greece
, Hungary
, Iceland
, Indonesia
, Latvia
, Luxembourg
, the
Netherlands
, Norway
, Portugal
, Romania
, Serbia
, Slovenia
, Spain
, Sweden
and
Turkey
.
"Schuko" is an abbreviation for the
German word
Schutzkontakt, which
means "Protective (that is, grounded) contact".
Some countries - notably Sweden - require child-proof outlet
shutters; the German
Schuko standard does not
have this requirement.
- Gost 7396 (Russian 10 A/250 V grounded)
Russian
Standard
Gost 7396 defines a plug and receptacle similar to the Schuko,
but with smaller pins of diameter, rated at 10 amps. A Gost
7396 will fit a Schuko receptacle, but the reverse is not possible
since the Schuko and CEE 7/17 plugs pins are too large. This
socket also accepts Europlugs.
After
reunification, the former East Germany
adopted the same DIN and VDE standards as West
Germany. Most Eastern European countries used the Schuko
standard, but exported appliances with the
Soviet standard plug.
Type E / F hybrid

CEE 7/7 plug
- CEE 7/7 (French/German 16 A/250 V grounded)
In order to bridge the differences between sockets E and F, the
CEE 7/7 plug was developed. It is polarised 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.It has grounding
clips on both sides to connect with the CEE 7/4 socket and a
female contact to accept the grounding pin of the type E
socket. It's also used in Spain and Portugal.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, but the
sockets are different.
Type G
- BS 1363 (British 13 A/230-240 V 50 Hz grounded and fused),
equivalent to IS 401 & 411 (Ireland), MS 589 (Malaysia) and SS
145 (Singapore)

BS 1363
The
British Standards 1363 plug.
This
design is used not only in the United Kingdom
, but also in Ireland
, Sri
Lanka
, Bahrain
, UAE
, Qatar
, Yemen
, Oman
, Cyprus
, Malta
, Gibraltar
, Botswana
, Ghana
, Hong Kong
, Macau
, Brunei
, Malaysia
, Singapore
, Indonesia
, Bangladesh
, Kenya
, Uganda, Malawi
, Nigeria
, Mauritius
, Iraq
, Kuwait
, Tanzania, Zambia
and
Zimbabwe
. BS 1363 is also standard in several of the
former British Caribbean colonies such as Belize
, Dominica
, St.
Lucia
, Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines
and Grenada
. It is also used in Saudi Arabia
in 230 V installations although 110 V
installations using the NEMA
connector are more common.
This plug, commonly known as a "13-amp plug", is a large plug that
has three rectangular prongs forming a triangle. Live and neutral
are long, and spaced apart. of insulation at the trailing ends of
the prongs prevents accidental contact with a bare connector while
the plug is partially inserted. The earth prong is approximately
and long.
The plug has a fuse inside. The fuse is required to protect the
cord, as British wiring standards allow very high-current
ring main circuits to the socket. Accepted
practice is to choose the smallest standard fuse (3, 5 or
13 A) that will allow the appliance to function. Using a
13 A fuse on an appliance with thin cord is a fire hazard. The
fuse is long, conforming to standard
BS
1362. Sockets are required to be wired with neutral on the left
and live on the right (viewed from the front of the socket) so that
the fuse in the plug disconnects the live feed if it blows. The
same convention is used for all British sockets connected directly
to "mains" wiring.
UK wiring regulations (
BS 7671) require
sockets in homes to have shutters over the live and neutral
connections to prevent the insertion of objects other than electric
plugs. On most designs, these shutters are opened by the insertion
of the longer earth prong. On some designs they are opened by the
simultaneous insertion of the live and neutral prongs of the right
shape and spacing. The effect of the shutters is to help prevent
the use of plugs made to other standards, and to prevent children
and others poking things into the dangerous connections. 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 may be
possible to open the shutters by putting a screwdriver blade into
the earth socket, so as to insert a Type C Plug (but not the
BS 4573 UK shaver) or other plug types, but
this can be dangerous for such plugs will not have a fuse and will
often not fit properly.
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 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. Outlets usually include switches on the live side for
convenience and safety.
Type H
- SI 32 (Israeli 16 A/250 V grounded)
This
plug, defined in SI 32 (IS16A-R), is unique to Israel
and is
incompatible with all other sockets. It has three flat pins
to form a Y-shape. Live and neutral are spaced apart. The Type H
plug is rated at 16A but in practice the thin flat pins can cause
the plug to overheat when connecting large appliances. In 1989, the
standard was revised to use three round pins in the same locations.
Sockets made since 1989 accept both flat and round pins for
compatibility with both old and new plugs. This also allows the
Type H socket to accommodate the type C plugs used in Israel for
non-earthed appliances. Older sockets, from about the 1970s, have
both flat and round holes for live and neutral in order to accept
both Type C and Type H plugs. As of 2008, type H sockets which
accept only old-style type H plugs are very rare in Israel.
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

Australasian switched 3-pin dual power
point (socket)
- AS/NZS 3112 (Australasian 10 A/240 V)

American patent filed in 1915 for a 3
prong grounding outlet, this example looks like the Type I.
This
plug, used in Australia, New Zealand
, Fiji
, Argentina
and Papua New Guinea
, has a grounding pin, and two flat current-carrying
pins forming an upside down V-shape. The flat blades measure
and are set at 30° to the vertical at a nominal pitch of .
Australian and New Zealand wall sockets almost always have switches
on them for extra safety, as in the UK. An unearthed version of
this plug with two angled power pins but no earthing pin is used
with small double-insulated appliances, but the power (wall)
outlets always have three pins, including a ground pin.
There are several AS/NZS 3112 plug variants, including one with a
wider ground pin used for devices drawing up to 15 amps; 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 20A larger pins and the earthing pin forming an inverted
"L" for the 25A and a horizontal "U" for the 32 A. These sockets
accept plugs of equal or of a lower current capacity, but not of
higher capacity. For example, a 10 A plug will fit all sockets but
a 20 A plug will fit only 20, 25 and 32 A outlets).
Australasia'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 by
2005. However, equipment and cords made before 2003 can still be
used.
Chinese sockets accepting plug types A, C (upper) and I (lower,
standard)
- CPCS-CCC (Chinese 10 A/250 V)
Although
the pins on the Chinese plug are 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 Mark by this system.The
plug is three wire, earthed, rated at 10 A, 250 V and used for
Class 1 applications.
In China, the sockets are installed upside-down relative to the
Australasian ones.
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 (Argentinian 10 A/250 V)
The
Argentinian
plug is a three-wire earthed plug rated at 10 A,
250 V defined by IRAM
and used in Class 1 applications in Argentina and Uruguay
.
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
Argentinian plug is wired with the live and neutral contacts
reversed.
Type J

regular Type J plug and covered
socket
Type J plugs and non-SEV 1011 socket
- SEV 1011 (Swiss 10 A/250 V)
Switzerland
has its own standard which is described in
SEV 1011. (ASE1011/1959 SW10A-R) This plug is similar
to the type C Europlug (CEE 7/16), except that it has an
offset earth pin and the pin shanks are not insulated, so plugs
partially inserted into non-recessed sockets present a
shock hazard. Sockets used in kitchens,
bathrooms and other wet areas are recessed, while those used
elsewhere are not. Some plugs and adaptors have a tapered form and
can be used in either environment, while others will fit only the
non-recessed sockets. Swiss sockets accept Swiss plugs or Europlugs
(CEE 7/16). There is also a non-earthed two-pin variant 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 round and hexagonal Swiss sockets and CEE 7/16 sockets,
and is rated for up to 10 A.
A less-common variant has 3 square pins and is rated for 16 amps.
Above 16 amps, equipment must either be hardwired to the electrical
supply system with appropriate branch circuit protection, or
connected to the mains with an appropriate high power industrial
connector.
Type K (Danish standard) and Thai 3 pin plug

Danish 107-2-D1, standard DK 2-1a,
with round power pins and half round ground pin

Outlet for Danish computer equipment
plug's tilted flattened pins and half round ground pin (mainly used
in professional environment), standard DK 2-5a
- Section 107-2-D1 (Danish 13 A/250 V earthed)
This
Danish
standard
plug is described in the Danish Plug Equipment Section 107-2-D1
Standard sheet (SRAF1962/DB 16/87 DN10A-R). The plug is
similar to the French type E except that it has an earthing pin
instead of an earthing hole (and vice versa on the socket). This
makes the Danish socket more unobtrusive than the French socket
which is a cavity into the wall to protect the earthing pin from
mechanical damage (and to protect from touching the live pins). The
Danish standard provides for outlets to have child-resistant
shutters.
The Danish socket will also accept the type C CEE 7/16
Europlug or type E/F CEE 7/17 Schuko-French hybrid plug. Type
F CEE 7/4 (Schuko), type E/F CEE 7/7 (Schuko-French
hybrid), and grounded type E French plugs will also fit into the
socket but should not be used for appliances that need earth
contact. The current rating on both plugs is 13A.
A variation (standard DK 2-5a) of the Danish plug is for use only
on surge protected computer outlets.It fits into the corresponding
computer socket and the normal type K socket, but normal type K
plugs deliberately don't fit into the special computer socket. The
plug is often used in companies, but rarely in private homes.
There is a variation for hospital equipment with a rectangular left
pin, it is used for life support equipment.
Traditionally all Danish sockets were equipped with a switch to
prevent touching live pins when connecting/disconnecting the plug.
Today, sockets without switch are allowed, but then it is a
requirement that the sockets have a cavity to prevent touching the
live pins. However, the shape of the plugs generally makes it
difficult to touch the pins when connecting/disconnecting.
Since the early 1990s grounded outlets have been required in all
new electric installations in Denmark. Older outlets need not be
grounded, but all outlets, including old installations, must be
protected by
ground-fault
interrupters (
HFI or
HPFI in Danish) by 1
July 2008.
As of 1 July 2008, wall outlets for type E (French 2-pin, female
earth) are permitted for installations in Denmark . This was done
because no electrical equipment sold to private users is equipped
with a type K plug, and to break the monopoly of
Lauritz Knudsen — the only company making
type K sockets and plugs.
Sockets for the Schuko F type will not be permitted. The reason is
that a large number of currently used Danish plugs (coincidentally
made by the afore mentioned Lauritz Knudsen monopoly) will jam when
inserted into a Schuko socket. This may cause damage to the socket.
It may also result in a bad connection of the pins, with resultant
risk of overheating and fire. Broken type F sockets are often seen
in German hotels visited by Danes. Many international travel
adapter sets sold outside Denmark match type C CEE 7/16 (Europlug)
and
type E/F CEE 7/7 plugs which
can readily be used in Denmark.
- Thai 3 pin plug TIS166-2549 (2006)
Thai multi-standard 3-pin sockets (like that shown below) safely
accept unpolarised type A, B and C plugs, and also a 3 round-pin
plug similar to (but incompatible with) type K..
Type L

23-16/VII plug with socket
- CEI 23-16/VII (Italian 10 A/250 V and 16 A/250 V)
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 (see below for details). Both are
symmetrical, allowing the live and neutral contacts to be inserted
in either direction.
The double standard was initially adopted because in Italy, up to
the second half of the twentieth century, the electric power used
for lamps (
Luce = lighting) and the one used for all other
appliances (
Forza =
electromotive force; or
Uso
Promiscuo = general purpose) were sold at different fares,
charged with different taxes, accounted with separated electricity
meters, and sent on different wire lines that ended with different
sockets. Even though the two electric lines (and respective fares)
were definitively unified during the summer of
1974 many houses kept twin wires and twin electricity
meters for years thereafter. The two gauges for plugs and sockets
thus became a
de facto standard
which is still in use today and has been standardized with CEI
23-16/VII. 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 gauge needs to be connected.
CEE 7/16 (type C) ungrounded Europlugs are also in common use;
they are standardized in Italy as CEI 23-5 and fit most of the
appliances with low current requirement and double
insulation.
Appliances with CEE 7/7 Schuko-French plugs are often sold in
Italy too; however not every socket will accept them since the pins
of the CEE 7/7 Schuko-French plugs are thicker than the
Italian ones. Adapters are cheap and commonly used to connect
CEE 7/7 plugs to CEI 23-16/VII sockets, though the power
rating may be mismatched (16A to 10A) and may lead to potentially
unsafe connection in some cases.
- CEI 23-16/VII (Italian 10 A/250 V)
The 10 ampere style extends CEE 7/16 by adding a central
earthing pin of the same gauge. Thus, CEI 23-16-VII 10A
sockets can accept CEE 7/16 Europlugs. This is the plug shown
in the first picture.
- CEI 23-16/VII (Italian 16 A/250 V)
The 16 ampere style looks like a magnified version of the 10 A
style, identical in shape. However, the pins are thick (being thick
in 10 A type), apart (while apart in 10 A type) and longer. The
packaging of these plugs in Italy may claim they are a "North
European" type. In the past they were also referred to as
per
la forza motrice (for electromotive force, see above) or
sometimes
industriale (industrial), although the latter
has never been a correct definition as factories used predominantly
three-phase current and specialized connectors.
- Twin-gauge or multi-type sockets

A
bipasso socket (number 1)
and an Italian adapted
schuko (number 2 in the photo) in a
modern installation.

An Italian VIMAR brand
universale socket which can accept type A, C, E, F, E/F
hybrids and both 10 A and 16 A L-type plugs.
Given that the plug with which appliances are fitted and sold
varies, in modern installations in Italy (and in other countries
where type L plugs are used) it is likely to find sockets that can
accept more than one standard.The simpler type has a central round
hole and two 8-shaped holes above and below. This design allows the
connection of both styles of type L plugs (CEI 23-16/VII 10 A and
16 A) and the type C CEE 7/16 Europlug. The advantage of this
socket style is its small, compact face.
VIMAR
brand claims to have patented this socket first in 1975 with their
Bpresa model; however soon other brands started selling
similar products mostly naming them with the generic term
presa
bipasso (twin-gauge socket) that is now of common use.
The current Italian standard provides for outlets to have
child-resistant shutters.
A second, quite common type looks like a type F socket, but adds a
central grounding hole. This design can accept CEE 7/7 (type
E/F) plugs, in addition to type C and type L 10A plugs. Some of
these sockets may also have 8-shaped holes to accept type L 16 A
plugs as well. One drawback is that it is twice as large as a
normal type L socket; also, 90° angled type L 16A plugs usually do
not fit in these sockets.
Other types may push compatibility even further. The
VIMAR-brand
universale (all purpose) socket,
for example, accepts CEE 7/7 (type E/F) plugs, type C plugs,
both 10A and 16A type L plugs, and American/Japanese type A plugs
as well.
- Other countries
Outside
of Italy, type L CEI 23-16/VII (Italian 10 A/250 V) plug is found
in Syria
, Libya
, Ethiopia
, Chile
, Argentina
, Uruguay
, various countries in North
Africa, and occasionally in older buildings in Spain
.
Type M
- BS 546 (South African 15 A/250 V)
Type M is sometimes used to describe the 15 A version of the old
British
type D, used in
South Africa and elsewhere.
Proposed common standard
- IEC 60906-1 (Brazilian 16 A/250 V)
In 1986, the International Electrotechnical Commission published
IEC 60906-1, the specification for a
plug that looks similar but is not identical to the Swiss (Type J)
plug. This plug was intended to become one day the common standard
for all of Europe and other regions with 230 V mains, but the
effort to adopt it as a European Union standard was put on hold in
the mid 1990s.
Brazil
, which
uses a mix of Europlug and NEMA plugs, later adopted it as national
standard NBR 14136 in 2001. It has been planned for
gradual adoption starting in 2007 and ending in 2010 (end-user
stores and resellers can sell equipments without adoption
deadlines, but importers will not be allowed to bring nonconforming
devices, nor will manufacturers be able to sell them
locally).
Comparison of plugs
| Type |
Plug standard |
Power rating |
Grounded |
Polarised |
Fused |
| A |
NEMA 1-15 unpolarised |
15A/125V |
|
|
|
| NEMA 1-15 polarised |
15A/125V |
|
|
|
| JIS C 8303, Class II |
15A/100V |
|
|
|
| B |
NEMA 5-15 |
15A/125V |
|
|
|
| NEMA 5-20 |
20A/125V |
|
|
|
| JIS C 8303, Class I |
15A/100V |
|
|
|
| C |
CEE 7/16 |
2.5A/250V |
|
|
|
| CEE 7/17 |
16A/250V |
|
1 |
|
| Soviet plug |
6A/250V |
|
|
|
| D |
BS 546 |
2A/250V
5A/250V = BS 4573
|
|
|
|
| BS 546 |
2A/250V
5A/250V
15A/250V = SABS 164
30A/250V
|
|
|
|
| E |
CEE 7/5 |
16A/250V |
|
|
|
| F |
CEE 7/4 |
16A/250V |
|
|
|
| E+F |
CEE 7/7 |
16A/250V |
|
2 |
|
| G |
BS 1363, IS 401 & 411, MS 589, SS
145 |
13A/230-240V |
|
|
|
| H |
SI 32 |
16A/250V |
|
|
|
| I |
AS/NZS 3112 |
10A/240V
20A/240V
25A/240V
32A/240V
|
and
No
|
|
|
| CPCS-CCC |
10A/250V |
|
|
|
| IRAM 2073 |
10A/250V |
|
|
|
| J |
SEV 1011 |
10A/250V
16A/250V
|
|
|
|
| K |
Section 107-2-D1 |
13A/250V |
|
|
|
| Thailand TIS 166 - 2549 |
13A/250V |
|
|
|
| L |
CEI 23-16/VII |
10A/250V
16A/250V
|
|
|
|
| - |
IEC 60906-1 (2 pin) |
16A/250V |
|
|
|
| IEC 60906-1 (3 pin) |
16A/250V |
|
|
|
1 There are some CEE 7/17 plugs with special shape which
are polarised when used withfrench socket of type E
2 Plug can only be inserted one way with French socket
of type E, but lack of wiring convention means that the type is not
polarised in practice
Multi-standard sockets
Sockets that take a variety of plug types can be found in various
countries where market size or local market conditions make a
specific plug standard impractical to implement. These socket
accept plugs fitting various European, Asian and North American
standards. Since many plug standards are also associated with
corresponding voltages, multi-standard sockets do not safeguard
against devices being damaged by the wrong voltage. This forces
users to be aware of the voltage requirements of their appliances
as well as the prevailing local voltage. Devices designed to adapt
automatically to whatever voltage and frequency is supplied, and
which don't require grounding, are generally safe to use with these
sockets.
These sockets have one or more ground holes to allow 3-pin plugs.
On properly wired circuits, the ground contact may be actually
grounded; however, as with most other forms of plugs, they are not
immune to poor wiring. They may also not provide grounding to all
types of plugs, as is the case of Schuko or French plugs where the
grounding pin that mates with the plug is part of the socket rather
than the plug.
Adapters

A type M (15 A version of type D)
travel adapter
To facilitate travelers' use of personal electric devices, adapters
are available to permit the interconnection of
normally-incompatible plugs and sockets. Such adapters overcome
only the physical incompatibilities between plugs and sockets built
to different standards; often a
voltage converter is required for
electrical compatibility.
Obsolete types
Old Spanish sockets
 |
 |
Left: Spanish three-prong plug and socket, with
easily removable fuse)
Right: An adapter to allow types C and F to be inserted
|
Some older industrial buildings in Spain used sockets that took a
particular type of plug which was rated for higher current and had
two flat contacts and a round ground pin, somewhat similar in
design to the ones found on American plugs but larger in
size.
The live and neutral measure , and are apart. All three pins are
long, and the earth pin is a cylinder of diameter.
While the plug resembles an American connector, the two flat
contacts are much wider apart than on a standard American plug,
which will therefore not fit in these sockets.
No domestic appliances were ever sold with these plugs.
UK electric clock connector

British electric clock connector,
3-pin made by MK.
Showing the rear of the plug with its 2 A fuse.
Different manufacturers' clock connectors were generally not
compatible.
Fused plugs and sockets of various proprietary and
non-interchangeable types are found in older public buildings in
the UK, where they are used to feed AC electric wall clocks. They
are smaller than conventional socket outlets, commonly being made
to fit
BESA junction
boxes, and are often of very low profile. Early types were
available fused in both poles, later types fused in the live only
and provided an earth pin. Most are equipped with a retaining screw
or clip to prevent accidental disconnection. The prevalence of
battery powered
quartz controlled wall
clocks has meant that this connector is rarely seen in new
installations.
American "Type I"
 |
 |
Left: American Type I duplex outlet
Right: Compatibility of American and Australian Type I
plugs
|
The American electrical supply manufacturers Hubbell, Eagle, and
possibly others made outlets and plugs that would match Type I
plugs and sockets exactly. Type I connectors are used in
Australia for 240 V service. These American
outlets date back to at least 1915 (as seen in US Patent 1,179,728
filed in 1915), antedating the American 3 prong Type B sockets and
plugs. They were meant for appliances that needed grounding (120 V
at 15 amps), and to be used in
laundry
rooms for
washing machines and
gas
dryers (to power the motor). These
did not become popular because American type A 2-prong plugs would
not fit.
Split amperage/voltage ratings
Many older North American receptacles have two different amperage
and voltage ratings, most commonly 10A 250V/15A 125V. This has to
do with a peculiarity of the National Electrical Code from 1923 to
the 1950s. Originally, receptacles were rated at 10A 250V, because
the NEC limited lighting circuits to 10 amperes. In 1923, the code
changed to allow lighting circuits to be fused at 15 amperes;
however, the old rule still applied to circuits over 125
volts.Terrell Croft,
Wiring for Light and Power,
McGraw-Hill, 1924, pages 198-199 The higher voltages were rarely
used for lighting and appliances. Most receptacles with this rating
are of the "T-slot" type. This type of rating was phased out in the
1950s, and finally abolished in the 1960s with the adoption of the
current NEMA standards.
Pre-NEMA "twist-lock" devices can sometimes be found with split
250V/600V ratings. These are also obsolete.
U.S. perpendicular outlet

Perpendicular slot duplex outlet

Perpendicular slot RP-2B outlet 10A
42V AC
Another obsolete outlet, made by Bryant, 125 V 15 A and 250 V 10 A
rating.A
NEMA 5-20 125
V 20 A or 6-20 250 V 20 A plug with a missing ground pin would fit
this outlet, but a NEMA 2-20 plug is slightly too big to fit.
The upper slots as seen in the illustration connect to
silver-coloured wiring screws on the upper side, and the lower
slots connect to brass-coloured wiring screws on the lower
side.
In Australia, the same or similar T-configuration sockets are used
for
DC power outlets, such as in
Stand-alone Power Systems
(SAPS) or on boats.
In
Soviet
Union
and now Russia
this socket
is commonly used for wiring in places where the voltage was lowered
for safety purposes, like in schools, gas stations or in wet areas,
rated 42 V 10 A AC. Such unusual connection was intended
specifically to make the connection of standard higher-voltage
equipment impossible.
U.S. Combination duplex outlet
 |
 |
Left: An extremely old "Nurpolian"-brand black
parallel and tandem duplex outlet rated at 250 V 10 A (although
this type was normally supplied with 120 V).
Right: T-slot duplex outlet. |
The parallel and tandem outlet accepts normal parallel
NEMA 1-15
plugs and also tandem NEMA 2-15 plugs. Both pair of receptacles are
fed internally by the same supply.
A more recent and fairly common version of this type is the T-slot
outlet, in which the locations of the tandem and the parallel slots
were combined to create T-shaped slots. This version also accepts
normal parallel NEMA 1-15 plugs and also tandem NEMA 2-15 plugs.
Incidentally, a NEMA 5-20 (125 V, 20 A) or 6-20 (250 V, 20 A) plug
with a missing ground pin would fit this outlet. This type is no
longer available in retail shops since the 1960s.
U.K. Dorman & Smith (D&S)

D&S Socket
The D&S plugs and sockets were rated at 13 Amps and were one of
the early competing types for use on ring main circuits. They were
never popular in private houses but were widely deployed in
prefabricated houses and
council housing. The
BBC
also used them. D&S supplied the sockets to local authorities
at very low cost, with the intention of making money out of the
sales of plugs typically priced at 4 times the price of a type G
plug. It is not known exactly when D&S ceased manufacturing the
plugs and sockets but some local authorities continued to use them
in new installations until the late 1950s. Many D&S sockets
were still in use until the early 1980s, although the difficulty in
obtaining plugs for them after around 1970 often forced their users
to replace them with type G sockets. This generally violated local
authority regulations on alterations to council housing. The
D&S plug suffered from a serious design fault: the live pin was
a fuse which screwed into the plug body and tended to come
unscrewed on its own in use. A fuse that worked loose could end up
protruding from the socket, electrically live and posing a shock
hazard, when the plug was removed.
U.K. Wylex Plug
The Wylex plugs and sockets were produced by Wylex Electrical
Supplies Ltd. as a competitor to the type G and D&S sockets for
use on ring main circuits. The plugs were available in both 5 A and
13 A versions, differing only by the widths of the live and neutral
pins, and contained an internal fuse of the same rating as the
plug. A plug had a central round earth pin and two flat pins, one
on each side of the earth pin, for live and neutral. The two flat
pins were slightly offset above and below the line cutting through
the horizontal diameter of the earth pin. Wall sockets were rated
at 13 Amps and took both 5 A and 13 A plugs. Many 13 A plugs had a
socket on the back which took a 5 A plug, but would not take
another 13 A plug because the slots for the live and neutral pins
were narrower than those of the wall sockets, resulting in a
stacked arrangement. Wylex sockets were used in council housing and
public sector buildings, and for a short while in private housing.
They were
particularly popular in the Manchester
area although they were installed throughout
England, mainly in schools, university accommodation, and
government laboratories. Wylex plugs and sockets continued
to be manufactured for several years after type G sockets became
standard and were commonly used by banks and in computer rooms
during the 1960s and 70s for
uninterruptible power supplies
or "clean" filtered mains supplies. It is not known exactly when
Wylex ceased manufacturing its plugs and sockets; however plugs
were available in electrical shops of the Manchester area until the
mid 1980s.
Lampholder plug
A lampholder plug fits into the
Bayonet
cap or
Edison screw socket of a
lampholder in place of a
light bulb and
enables an electrical appliance to be powered from a wall or
ceiling light fitting. They were commonly used during the 1920s to
1960s when wall sockets were scarce or nonexistent in many houses.
Lampholder plugs were rarely fused.
Conventional practice in the U.K. is to protect lighting circuits
with a 5 A fuse or circuit breaker, which makes it very easy to
overload a lampholder and cause it to overheat by using a
lampholder plug. Wiring regulations in the U.K. and some other
countries no longer approve lampholder plugs because of the risks
of overheating and fire.
In Italy, bypass lampholder plugs with Edison screw mount were in
broad use until light wire cables were separated from general
purpose wire cables (see type L paragraph for details) and some
areas of the house (cellars, etc.) were commonly not provided with
sockets.
Edison screw lampholder adaptors (for Type A plugs) are still
easily found and commonly used in the Americas.
Old Greek sockets
 |
 |
| Greek old earthed standard adaptor plugs |
 |
| Greek old earthed standard socket. |
Called "Tripoliki" (τριπολικές) the 3 Pin round standard similar
totype J and post-1989 type H, virtually abandoned by 1995.
Previous to the large-scale adoption of schuko plugs, this was the
only way to use an earthed appliance.
Unusual types
NEMA 2-15 and 2-20
These ungrounded plugs with two flat parallel prongs are variants
of the 1-15 but are intended to deliver 240 volts instead of 120.
The 2-15 has coplanar current prongs (rotated 90° from ordinary
American plugs), and is used for 240 V service at 15 amperes, while
the 2-20 has the two current prongs rotated 90° relative to each
other (one vertical, one horizontal) and is used for 240 V service
at 20 amperes. NEMA 2 plugs and sockets are rare because they have
been prohibited for household use in the United States and Canada
for several decades. They are potentially hazardous since they have
no ground or neutral, and in some cases plugs can be inserted into
incorrect-voltage sockets. Prior to the adoption of the NEMA
standard, a plug nearly identical to the 2-20 was used for 120 V at
20 A. A 2-20 plug would fit into 5-20 and 6-20 sockets, which
supply different voltages.
Soviet adaptor plugs
Some
appliances sold in Soviet
Union
had a flat unearthed plug with an additional
pass-through socket on the top, allowing stacked arrangement of
plugs. This design was very helpful, for the usual soviet
flat had in 1960s very few wall sockets, but completely unsafe as
the brass cylinders of secondary socket were uncovered at the ends
(to unscrew them easily), recessed only for 3mm and provided bad
contact because relied on secondary plug's bisected expanding pins.
The pins of secondary plug (without insulation sleeves) could not
be inserted into cylinders completely and were accessible through a
5mm gap between primary and secondary plugs.
U.K. Walsall Gauge plug
 |
 |
| Walsall Gauge 13 A plug (bottom) compared to
regular BS 1363 plug |
Unlike the standard BS 1363 plugs found in the U.K., the earth
pin is on a horizontal axis and the live and neutral pins on a
vertical axis. This style of plug/socket was used by the BBC, and
is still in use on parts of the
London Underground for low voltage power
supply.
Italian Bticino brand Magic security connector
 |
 |
 |
Left: Bticino Magic Security receptacle,
detail.
Centre: assortment of Magic Security receptacles (in orange, the
industrial three-phase type).
Right: assortment of Magic Security plugs.
|
This style of connector, produced by Italian brand Bticino,
appeared in the 1960s and was intended as an alternative to the
Europlug or type L connectors then in use. The socket is an almost
rectangular receptacle, with one or more lateral key pins and
indents to prevent inverting the plug (it is polarised), or
connecting plugs and sockets with different ampere ratings. At
least four models were produced: three single-phase general purpose
connectors rated respectively 10 A, 16 A and 20 A; plus a
three-phase industrial connector rated 10 A; all of them have
different key-pin positioning so plugs and sockets cannot be
mismatched. The socket is closed by a safety lid (bearing the word
‘’Magic’’ on it) which can be opened only with an even pressure on
its surface, thus preventing the insertion of objects (except the
plug itself) inside the socket. The contacts are blades positioned
on both sides of the plug; the plug is energized only when it is
inserted fully into the socket.
The obvious drawback of the system is that it is not compatible
with europlugs. As household appliances were never sold fitted with
these security plugs and the use of adapters would defeat all of
the newly introduced safety features, once this system is adopted
all standard plugs must be cut off and replaced with the
appropriate security connector. However, the
Magic
security system had some success at first because its enhanced
safety features appealed to customers; standard connectors of the
day were considered not safe enough. The decline of the system
occurred when safety lids similar to the Magic type were developed
(VIMAR Sicury) and then applied to standard type L sockets by third
brands and by Bticino itself.
In Italy, the system was never definitively abandoned and, though
rarely seen today, is still marked as available in Bticino’s
products catalogue.
In Chile, 10 [A] Magic connectors are commonly used for
computer/laboratory power networks, as well as in those to be used
with communications or data equipments, as a measure to standardize
and improve reliability, due to its polarised nature, and the
difficulty to be accidentally unplugged, compared to the type L
plug, commonly used.
In Iceland, Magic connectors were widely used in homes and
businesses alongside Europlug and Schuko installations. Their
installation in new homes was still quite common even in the late
1980's.
See also
External links
References
- Collins Essential English Dictionary 2nd Edition 2006:
Power Point
- Redesign of a power point socket
- IEC/TR 60083, Plugs and socket-outlets for
domestic and similar general use standardized in member countries
of IEC, International Electrotechnical Commission (2006)
- NEMA
WD6, Dimensional requirements for plugs and
receptacles
- JIS C 8303-1993,Plugs and Receptacles for Domestic and
Similar General Use,Japanese Standards Association (1993)
- http://www.childoutletsafety.org/ Retrieved 2009 Jan 21
- EN 50075 (1991), Specification for flat non-wirable
two-pole plugs 2.5A 250V, with cord, for the connection of class
II-equipment for household and similar purposes, European
Committee for Standardization (CEN)
- BS 4573 (1970), British Standard Specification for two-pin
reversible plugs and shaver socket-outlets, British Standards
Institution
- http://users.telenet.be/worldstandards/electricity.htm#plugs_f
Electricity around the world
- BS 1363 (1995), 13 A plugs, socket-outlets and adaptors
Specification for rewirable and non-rewirable 13 A fused
plugs, British Standards Institute.
- AS/NZS 3112:2004, Approval and test specification — Plugs
and socket-outlets, Standards Australia and Standards New
Zealand
- 5. udgave af Stærkstrømsbekendtgørelsen afsnit
107-2-D1 "Stikpropper og stikkontakter for danske
systemer"
- [1] Retrieved on 10 Sep 2009.
- De Cesco G.: Acqua Luce Gas. Manuali pratici del far da sé. I
Jolly bricolage. Fratelli Fabbri Editori, Milano, 1975. PP
56–57.
- De Cesco G.: Acqua Luce Gas. Manuali pratici del far da sé. I
Jolly bricolage. Fratelli Fabbri Editori, Milano, 1975. P 93.
- De Cesco G.: Acqua Luce Gas. Manuali pratici del far da sé. I
Jolly bricolage. Fratelli Fabbri Editori, Milano, 1975. PP
70–71.
- La ricerca della sicurezza. Ma la ricerca
continua. www.vimar.eu. Retrieved on 22 Jan 2009.
- NBR 14136:2002 - Plugues e tomadas para uso doméstico e análogo
– Padronização (Plugs and socket-outlets for household use and
similar purposes - Specification)
- http://patft.uspto.gov/netahtml/PTO/srchnum.htm and type in the
patent number in the search box, then click "images"
- De Cesco G.: Acqua Luce Gas. Manuali pratici del far da sé. I
Jolly bricolage. Fratelli Fabbri Editori, Milano, 1975. P 73.
- De Cesco G.: Acqua Luce Gas. Manuali pratici del far da sé. I
Jolly bricolage. Fratelli Fabbri Editori, Milano, 1975. P 75.
- La ricerca della sicurezza. Il brevetto Sicury.
www.vimar.eu. Retrieved on 12 Feb 2009.
- Catalogo online. Installazione civile.
www.professionisti.bticino.it. Retrieved on 12 Feb 2009.