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Socket with slimest back connections?

Discuss Socket with slimest back connections? in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

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Hi, The walls have been chased out and he fitted 25mm back boxes and to be fair you can't really go any deeper but one socket on a ring is feeding a spur so three cables and yes you can fit it in but really id like a bit more room.

Are there any sockets that have very thin connections on the back?
Thanks
 
it does seem a bit dodgy - the transformer malfunctions fine the MCB trips but on a ring there is also a broken leg and 32A MCB = fry time.

If the power supply for the USB outlets fails then the protection built in to that unit will operate.

A broken ring won't change how an MCB responds to a fault, it only affects overload situations.
 
Anything plugged into a Ring should be fused in case of a broken leg. With a broken leg it becomes a radial wired in 2.5 and a 32A MCB will not provide adequate protection.

No, see my previous comment. The socket will have built in protection, otherwise it would not meet the BS standards.

Edit, not sure I understand your point. I was answering your previous point about USB sockets not being fused.
 
"Previously, each mains socket had its own connection to the fuse board. To save copper, Britain adopted the ring main system, with sockets connected sequentially, but this meant each connection needed its own fuse. Instead of putting the fuses in the sockets, they were included in the plugs themselves."

Fused plugs are only required in the UK where we use Rings.

the flex is protected by the Fuse/MCB at the DB on a radial.
 
Not going too off topic but technically now you mention it an unfused supply off a ring? maybe theres a reg being broken there.
If you are talking about USB 13A sockets, since 2016 when the socket British Standard was revised to cover built-in electronics, the design has to incorporate a fusible link or fuse, and the psu must be SELV, meeting creepage and clearance distances and transformer insulation requirements etc. etc.
USBs got off to a bad start before that revised standard, when the market was flooded with dubious products, though I think China also makes 'proper' ones now.
But these days I like to think if you buy an approved product from a reputable manufacturer/source, there should no longer be a problem!
Newer technology allows a phone or tablet you plug in to negotiate with the USB charger what voltage/ current it wants.
I guess you could say that's that's an added safety feature, or something else to go wrong!
 
If you are talking about USB 13A sockets, since 2016 when the socket British Standard was revised to cover built-in electronics, the design has to incorporate a fusible link or fuse, and the psu must be SELV, meeting creepage and clearance distances and transformer insulation requirements etc. etc.
USBs got off to a bad start before that revised standard, when the market was flooded with dubious products, though I think China also makes 'proper' ones now.
But these days I like to think if you buy an approved product from a reputable manufacturer/source, there should no longer be a problem!
Newer technology allows a phone or tablet you plug in to negotiate with the USB charger what voltage/ current it wants.
I guess you could say that's that's an added safety feature, or something else to go wrong!
I'd be interested to know if these sockets do have a fused link or fuse.

But really I'm only referring to Rings etc Even if you took a selv spur of a Ring you have to fuse it.
 

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