In article l.net,
Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Mon, 26 Jun 2017 13:46:58 +0100, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
I suspect most "eletrical appliance" fires are damaged or
otherwise
abused cables and plug/sockets rather than an actual fault with
the
appliance(*). Just like most things failing a PAT on the visual
inspection rather than what the box says when the button is
pressed.
(*) Note "fault" not "poor design".
That might apply to truly portable things - but fridge freezers and
tumble driers?
Why not? Plugged in via extension cable and/or multi socket plug
stuff dangling in the space, things gradually corrode/work loose,
high resistance, heat, fire...
These were newly refurbished flats. With, I'd guess, enough sockets for
the normal kitchen stuff - and in the right place. I
You, I and most people in here wouldn't do that sort of thing but
great many people haven't a clue about electricity.
It's mostly AV and computer stuff that ends up on extension leads.
Kitchens tend to be much better in that respect.
--
*Why is it that to stop Windows 95, you have to click on "Start"?
Dave Plowman
London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.