Tweakers' Asylum Tweaks for systems, rooms and Do It Yourself (DIY) help. FAQ. |
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In Reply to: RE: Not the examples you gave. posted by Dynaudio_Rules on April 22, 2010 at 15:33:47:
Those appliances are mostly a motor and switch, and in the case of the dishwasher, low voltage electronic circuitry or a mechanical timer, controlling solenoids. Not very complex, and a fuse or circuit breaker should clear any malfunction that poses a fire risk. If you've ever seen sparks, smoke and flame shoot out of the vents of an amp or TV with so-called protection circuitry, you would understand why hardwiring by itself is not advisable.
A lot of hardwired heavy duty equipment has a main disconnect of some kind to shut off power in the case of an emergency or when servicing is required. I worked in a shop in the 1980s that had a lot of hardwired machinery. Each unit had its own double pole disconnect switch on the wall.
I think if amps were to be approved for hardwiring, they would need such disconnecting means. IMO, we would be replacing one evil (plug and receptacle) with another (DPST snap switch).
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Follow Ups
- RE: Not the examples you gave. - Glen B 04/23/1011:07:07 04/23/10 (1)
- RE: Not the examples you gave. - Dynaudio_Rules 11:08:03 04/23/10 (0)