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by robocat
2518 days ago
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The US system is somewhat unique and lacks heaps of safety features: I am guessing mostly because a 110V shock is far less dangerous than a 240V shock (Although higher amperages mean higher risk of fire?). For example for UK, EU and NZ etc: sockets and pins have a variety of features to avoid touching the phase (live) wire with say a screwdriver or knife in hands of a child. For example, all new circuits installed in New Zealand since 209 must have an Residual Current Detector (the actual rules lead to multiple RCDs per main power board). This will cut the circuit if someone does manage to touch a live wire somehow (current from phase to neutral doesn't match, because some of it is grounded through your body, and the mismatch triggers the breaker. Wayyyyyyy safer than a fuse! |
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