Quite so. The initial suggestion was that they were introduced as a safety (insulating) measure and, as I have been discussing with SUNRAY, that is clearly nonsense, since they were initially metal. It could be that when it became possible for them to make plastic versions much more easily/cheaply, they 'noted' that the change might also offer some theoretical 'safety' benefit - but there was clearly a perceived need for such connectors (as you say, presumably for user and/or manufacturing 'convenience') before they came to be 'insulators'.I looked at a few of these yesterday where I was working and most had the plastic bit so small that the two knots touched together, I would think if they were for a safety purpose then they'd certainly be longer to prevent this and to migitgate againt a path forming on the outside due to condensed droplets. The instructions would contain a warning about not tying the ends together if it breaks (I've never seen this anywhere). ... I firmly believe that this is a story that has formed somehow, and because it sounds somewhat credible it has propogated, I'm more inclined to belive it came about not just for use convieince (in case of a snapped string) but also a manufacturing convienience... the process that produces the switch body probably doesn't want to contend with a mass of string, so this gets attached later on
Indeed. As I've said, I've never seen one in which the top end of the string gets anywhere near anything electrical.I would imagine the string is atatched inside to a plastic component anyway, so even if the complete string were sodden then there wouldn't actually be a problem
Kind Regards, John