On Sunday, May 20, 2012 4:37:20 PM UTC+2, Fred Abse wrote:
> On Thu, 17 May 2012 04:16:01 -0700, fungus wrote:
>
> > ...apart from the fact that you can plug them in either way around (ie.
> > live/neutral swapped) causing massive sparks when you try to connect your
> > printer to your PC due to the difference in ground levels.
>
> Any printer that has a low impedance path to neutral
> from ground would be illegal in just about any jurisdiction.
Yep, and this is precisely what kills them.
When you have two devices with transformers
the difference between what each device
considers "0V" can be huge depending on
which way around you plug them into the
mains.
If you have a cable with many wires in it
(eg. A 25-pin serial/parallel cable) then
when you connect it the pins with the data
lines can connect before the 0V pin. This
will kill the I/O chips if there's enough
difference between logic ground levels.
I've measured differences of 140V on devices
with Euro plugs. The difference usually goes
down near zero if you reverse the mains plug
of one of them.
> Do you honestly think that VDE, T�V, DIN, etc. would have missed such an
> obvious thing?
>
I think they were probably thinking of
white goods when they designed it, not
printer cables.
> They are fused inside the plug because the UK (unlike most of the rest of
> the world) allows, and uses, ring circuits with a single 30 amp breaker for
> the whole ring. Illegal in many places. Ring circuits in the UK were one
> reason that a standardized Euro-plug never happened.
>
Swings and roundabouts.
In Europe you have no idea how much power
can be drawn from any given socket. Plug
in a heater on the "wrong" side of the
room and you can be plunged into darkness
because it was on the same circuit breaker
as the lighting.