Hi Everyone
Thought I should share my experiences with you. We own a 10-year-old flat on the Costa Blanca. For obvious reasons I took some 4-way trailing sockets with me, and bought Shuko plugs to go on the end of the flying cable - safer than the 99p adapters you can buy. I also took a cheap (3-neon) UK-style socket tester. As far as I am concerned, as you look at the socket, the right hand is Phase, the left Neutral. Socket 1 was OK, but socket 2 had reverse polarity. So I went to the distribution board and switched off the "power" breaker in order to reverse the cables supplying the socket. Back at the socket, my test plug was still alight! So I went back to the dis board and isolated the lighting circuit. Off went my test plug! So I tested each socket in turn. All the sockets, except those in the kitchen, are fed from the 10A lighting circuit. What the.......!
The potential (no pun intended) danger here is clear, so when we go back over in a few months time, I will be marking up each socket with the breaker from which it is supplied, and putting a large sticker in the distribution board warning that some sockets are supplied from the lighting breaker. Hopefully marking the sockets will help prevent the lighting circuit being overloaded by portable room heaters/coolers!
Talking to "the locals" it appears that this is common practice in Spain! We in the UK gave that up in the 1960s. But even before that we identified low-power sockets by making them 2-pin and 5A (Power in those days was 3-pin 15A) Harmonisation? What harmonisation? Oh, and btw, all circuit breakers in my dis board are double pole!!!!!!
Please bear this in mind if you are doing any electrical work in Spain, or even plugging in a heater/cooler. One saving grace was that all sockets were earthed - or earthed sufficiently to light a neon!
Thought I should share my experiences with you. We own a 10-year-old flat on the Costa Blanca. For obvious reasons I took some 4-way trailing sockets with me, and bought Shuko plugs to go on the end of the flying cable - safer than the 99p adapters you can buy. I also took a cheap (3-neon) UK-style socket tester. As far as I am concerned, as you look at the socket, the right hand is Phase, the left Neutral. Socket 1 was OK, but socket 2 had reverse polarity. So I went to the distribution board and switched off the "power" breaker in order to reverse the cables supplying the socket. Back at the socket, my test plug was still alight! So I went back to the dis board and isolated the lighting circuit. Off went my test plug! So I tested each socket in turn. All the sockets, except those in the kitchen, are fed from the 10A lighting circuit. What the.......!
The potential (no pun intended) danger here is clear, so when we go back over in a few months time, I will be marking up each socket with the breaker from which it is supplied, and putting a large sticker in the distribution board warning that some sockets are supplied from the lighting breaker. Hopefully marking the sockets will help prevent the lighting circuit being overloaded by portable room heaters/coolers!
Talking to "the locals" it appears that this is common practice in Spain! We in the UK gave that up in the 1960s. But even before that we identified low-power sockets by making them 2-pin and 5A (Power in those days was 3-pin 15A) Harmonisation? What harmonisation? Oh, and btw, all circuit breakers in my dis board are double pole!!!!!!
Please bear this in mind if you are doing any electrical work in Spain, or even plugging in a heater/cooler. One saving grace was that all sockets were earthed - or earthed sufficiently to light a neon!