Rough and ready assembled on bits of 4 by 1 timber.
Single "main" socket to feed them.
Could have been a tidier job but it is the work room so not critical.[/img]
That describes exactly what I was suggesting - "fixed extension" kind of sums it up.the "fixed extension" if we can call it that? is not overloaded and the correct cable sizing used, it should be safe. As it will be protected by the 13A fuse in the plug top.
In essence very much like a fused spur to socket outlets.
Agree with all of that - The single socket is on RCD (the ring main RCD), and the plug will be correctly fused. I will probably take your advice on trunking, and was planning on labelling the sockets "computer/peripheral only" to identify them as different to the main house sockets.make sure there is RCD protection and you have a fuse (not tin foil) in the plug top that feeds it all, cable in trunking looks neater that a clipped cable.
Because it is the kind of thing an amateur would do. Often found in pubs, where a plug has a flex (or worse, t&e, which isn't allowed) which just seems to disappear off somewhere, possibly to a socket which powers a television. This means it can't easily be tested, plus as already mentioned there is the confusion as to whether it should be tested under a periodic inspection, or portable appliance test.Why does using fixed sockets "scream out amateur" any more than "driving a couple of screws into desks to hold trailing extension leads"? I'm not criticising your comment, I'm just asking for clarification.
"Driving a couple of screws into desks to hold trailing extension leads" might sound a bit haphazard, but it's what's often done in offices.
it's a bit like a multi socket extension screwed to a deskIt's not so much a question of whether or not you can identify a "fixed extension", more "what IS a "fixed extension""?
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