Extension Cords and Electrical
Plugs
We all use extension cords and electrical plugs in
our home. Unfortunately the electrical cords on
most electrical appliances are too short to reach
the nearest electrical outlet. One would think that
they would have at least an eight foot cord because
the electrical code requirement is to place
electrical outlets no further than eight feet from
each other. In addition we use extension cords in
the garage and workshop to operate electrical
equipment. There are several different types of
plugs on these extension cords which poses problems
plugging them in to appliances.
For the most part the electrical plug types of the
world are divided into two major geographic areas.
The U.S. and Japan in one group, and South America,
Europe and Asia in the other group. Africa,
southern Asia, and Australia are another group
where they use a very heterogeneous mix of
electrical plug types.
In the US the two types of electrical plugs used
are the Type-A and Type-B. The
most prominent plug used on lamps is the Type -A
plug which is a two pin ungrounded plug.
The second is a Type-B plug which is a
version of the Type-A plug. The Type-B plug is a
three pin plug that incorporates a ground pin.

The Type A has 2 flat parallel pins. These 2 pins
used to be the same size, but on new electrical
plugs the neutral contact is larger than the live
contact.
The Type-B electrical plug has the same 2 parallel
pins as the Type-A electrical plug, but also has a
round grounding pin beneath the two flat pins. The
grounding pin is longer than the flat pins. That's
so the electrical plug will be grounded before it
makes the connection to the electrical supply.
Since about the mid-1960s, all electrical outlets
and appliances are required to accommodate the
Type-B 3-pin electrical plug design. But most lamps
are not required to have a three pin plug although
they do fit into a three pin outlet.
Unfortunately extension cords last for many years
and if you have an older cord that does not have a
three pin plug it will not work on newer electrical
appliances because there is no place for the ground
pin. Many users simply use an adapter that adapts
the three pin appliance to the two pin cord. This
is potentially a dangerous situation. The purpose
of the third pin, the ground pin, is to protect the
users in the event the appliance has a short
circuit. If the appliance shorts out, the user can
suffer from a severe burn or electric shock.
There is no way that we can
get away from using extension cords and electrical
plugs in our home but we can insure that we use
them safely. Never cut the ground pin off an
electrical appliance so it will fit into a two pin
extension cord. Use an adapter if necessary. If you
make your own extension cords out of stock material
insure that you always use a three pin connector on
both ends. A proper extension cord plug should
always have three pin connectors.
Related articles:
Electric
Safety
Extension Cords