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[email protected] clare@snyder.on.ca is offline
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Default 220v socket is loose

On Mon, 20 Mar 2017 19:14:02 +0200, Micky
wrote:

I'm renting a room from a woman and the power is 220 Volts. More than
once she has scorched one pin of her room heater's plug. The last
guy who replaced it adviced her to only turn on one of the two heater
halves.

I replaced the plug too and pointed out that if the receptacle is
loose, that's a problem too. She showed me that her bedroom socket
barely grips the plug or not at all.

She hasn't asked me yet to replace the whole socket, and even if I
did... the apartment was wired for internet cable, so it must have
been remodeled not that long ago, and I'm guessintg the electric
sockets were replaced too (I can ask her.)

So.... Is there a device one can put into a 220v. socket (receptacle)
that will expand and make a tight connection with a loose socket?

Or any other way around her problem?




Also, I brought an American extension cord with me, so I would only
need one adapter for the computer, the camera charger, the phone
charger, and the earpiece charger, all of which together don't use
that much iirc, but somone tells me a US extension cord might not be
able to handle 220v. What say ye?

Nothing you can insert in the plug will tighten it up. What country
and what style of 220 plug?? American extention cords, by and large,
are insulated to withstand a minimum of 300 volts -and many are rated
for 600.