• Descent 298 publication date

    Our June/July issue will be published on Saturday 8 June

    Now with four extra pages as standard. If you want to receive it as part of your subscription, make sure you sign up or renew by Monday 27 May.

    Click here for more

Special power strip for expeditions

cavermark

New member
SAw a two headed living piglet in the news recently, presumably this is the next stage (was it from near Fukishima?)
 

jarvist

New member
Amy said:
what country are those pins for anyway? I don't recognize it.

Just this tiny, irrelevant, continent called Europe. Oh, and Russia and most of Africa.  ::)

Incidentally, following Les' joke comment above, you can actually force an Euro plug into a British 3-pin socket (it's a couple of mil out of tolerance), by pushing something a little way into the Earth pin to open the child-safety blanking plates (bic biros work well). You probably shouldn't, due to house wiring standard differences, but you can get away with it when you're using something like a double-insulated universal switch-mode supply (i.e. laptop / camera chargers). Can be useful to improvise some power to a visiting friend / conference speaker etc.
 

Amy

New member
Sorry I've never been anywhere but US, Canada, and UK. I've seen Australian plugs before and knew it wasn't those either, but that was all! I'm still young and poor, give me time and money to travel and I'll make it there!  (y)
 

potholer

Active member
jarvist said:
Incidentally, following Les' joke comment above, you can actually force an Euro plug into a British 3-pin socket (it's a couple of mil out of tolerance), by pushing something a little way into the Earth pin to open the child-safety blanking plates (bic biros work well).
When some visitors tried that at the NPC, they overdid the 'force' bit and broke the body of the socket.
I'm not sure how standard their plug was, but the pins of the plug were longer than the socket was designed for.
 
Top