![]() |
|
Welcome to the HEXUS.community discussion forums forums. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, respond to polls and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! |
| |||||||
| Audio/Visual - Standard and HD Discussions about audio and visual equipment, media and content for both standard and HD |
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools |
| | #1 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: London
Posts: 1,964
Thanks: 39
Thanked 21 Times in 20 Posts
| Bathroom shaver sockets I've got shaver sockets in the bathrooms in my flat. I never use them but was wondering whether it would be okay to plug a small radio into them. I've already got a radio in the bathroom but run it on batteries and they last around 3 months and are quite expensive to replace (4 x 'C' batteries). The radio came with a mains lead but as there is no 3-pin outlet in the bathroom, would I be okay in plugging it into the shaver socket (with an adaptor plug)? The total consumption of the radio is around 6W. I don't want to blow anything up! |
| | |
| | #2 (permalink) |
| HEXUS.lifestyle Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 2,519
Thanks: 13
Thanked 2 Times in 2 Posts
| Well, shavers draw less than 1W, so a socket intended for a shaver may only be rated at 1W and fused at that (just like three-pin-to-two-pin shaver adaptors which all have 1W fuses). However, even if the radio didn't blow a fuse, you have to think about the UK law concerning what sorts of mains electrical appliance you can and can't run in a bathroom - and its pretty restrictive. This doesn't seem to be the case in mainland Europe - people often have washing machines and tumble dryers in their bathrooms over there - but, nanny state or not, there is good reason for the UK law. The main one is that it's not a good idea to have portable electric products running in the bathroom that aren't intended to be used in the bathroom, since you could get killed if the product were dropped or knocked into the sink or bath while you were washing or bathing. The other possibility, of course, is that you'd be sitting in the bath listening to the radio, decide to change channels and only find after you'd reached out and touched the radio - then died and gone to heaven - that the radio was faulty. So, my advice is, pay up for disposable batteries; use rechargeable batteries; or power the radio from the mains socket OUTSIDE the bathroom - and leave the radio out there where you can't reach it from the bath or while your hands are in the sink. Bob |
| | |
| | #4 (permalink) |
| I need a coffee Join Date: Sep 2005 Location: London
Posts: 1,048
Thanks: 20
Thanked 3 Times in 3 Posts
| if you can run the radio from an isolated transformer you could run the lead from that into the bathroom and take power from that. If the radio takes a mains voltage and has an internal transformer that's not an option of course. You sure you're not just reading the power rating off the back of the transformer? 6W sounds enthusiastic for a little radio that lasts 3 months on a set of 4 C cells! How long do you have it on each day? |
| | |
| | #5 (permalink) |
| chown -R me ./base Join Date: Sep 2005 Location: On Teh Internets
Posts: 1,185
Thanks: 9
Thanked 20 Times in 18 Posts
| Or as an alternative.... go get one of those wind-up radio's, then you can give it a twist when you walk into the bathroom, leave it on a shelf or something, and even if it did fall in the bath, the most its going to give you is a tingle. ![]() |
| | |
| | #6 (permalink) |
| I need a coffee Join Date: Sep 2005 Location: London
Posts: 1,048
Thanks: 20
Thanked 3 Times in 3 Posts
| you'd never notice ANY tingle from a battery operated device. If indeed it does short out it'll short across the battery terminals, and you are unlikely to be between those terminals. The only time it gets dangerous is when you manage to become a link to ground for a live wire. Get a rubber bath... |
| | |
| | #8 (permalink) |
| Loves Wifey Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: Cambridge, UK
Posts: 6,469
Thanks: 226
Thanked 214 Times in 172 Posts
| Originally Posted by jamena ...and rubber water, rubber pipes...
Te audire non possum. Musa sapientum fixa est in aure ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- System 001: Asus P5Q Deluxe, Q6600 @ 3.0ghz, D-Tek FuZion V2 CPU Block, GTX280, Alphacool GPU Block, 4GIG Corsair 6400 DDR2 RAM CL4 @ 800mhz, Corsair HX1000, Dell SP2309W, Logitech 5.1, Seagate 7200.10 320gb x 2 (RAID 0), 500 GIG 7200.9 (backups), Intel X25-M Gen 2 SSD (System), Antec 1200 case, Thermochill 120.3 rad, Vario Pump, Windows 7 x64 [main] System 002: 4200X2, ASROCK (my ass-rocks!) 939 uATX MB, ATI1650 (passive), Zalman 500W psu, Dell 2001FP 20" LCD, £7's worth of 5.1 speakers (they rock) Windows 7 x86[wife/server] System 003: AOpen 1557 GLSLaptop, ATI 9600 64mb, 1.5 GIG of DDR2700 memory, 60gig fujitsu HD 8mb cache, Intel Wireless and it's great! Windows 7 32bit [main lappy] System 004: ASUS A8N Premium, 4200 X2, 2 GIG Corsair, Silverstone HTPC case, XP120 cooler, 8600GTS (passive), Samsung 500GIG, MCE Remote, Samsung 40" LCD (87BDX) via HDMI Windows 7 (32) [media centre] System 005: 7" Asus Eee PC 701-B Intel Mobile, 2GB DDR2, 4GB Solid State HDD, Linux Deleted - XP to replace it!, Black [toy] System 006: Acer Aspire One, 1gb, 120gb HD, 6 cell battery, intel wireless upgrade,Windows 7 32bit Work System 001: HP supplied Quad Core Q6600, 4gb DDR 2, 400gb SATA RAID 0, 250gb SATA backup drive, nVidia 8800GTS 640mb, HP LP2065, Eizo M1700, Windows 7 64 RTM [main work system] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Directory Opus 9 rocks! (click here) Opera Ad-Blocker (click here) |
| | |
| | #9 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: London
Posts: 1,964
Thanks: 39
Thanked 21 Times in 20 Posts
| jamena: the radio is used for around 15 minutes per day. My other bathroom is used for bathing/showering so electrocution isn't really a big problem. The bathroom in question is only ever used for shaving and guests (not at the same time!). |
| | |
| | #11 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2004 Location: Stafford, West Midlands
Posts: 634
Thanks: 3
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
| Shaver sockets usually have a 1amp fuse in them, which gives you a maximum of 230 watts (although i would never try and draw this much current). I agree with the wind up/rechargeable battery ideas. I actually have a wind up radio, they are pretty nifty and last about 15-20 mins for 30 seconds of winding - not bad eh! Tim |
| | |
| | #12 (permalink) |
| HEXUS.lifestyle Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 2,519
Thanks: 13
Thanked 2 Times in 2 Posts
| Tim, Thanks for letting me off lightly! Must have been very tired when I did my original reply, stupidly talking about 1A (which is what 3pin-to-2pin shaver sockets are fused at) and then transposing that directly into Watts. D'oh! Bob C Originally Posted by Timmy!!!
|
| | |
![]() |
| Breadcrumb | ||||||
| ||||||
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Thread Tools | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| New AMD Sockets Unveiled | Steve | HEXUS.net | 9 | 27-04-2005 05:08 PM |
| Braun 4615 Washable & Rechargeable Mains Shaver | 0iD | Current Bargains | 3 | 01-03-2005 09:13 PM |
| ugh ! slugs in bathroom !! | Snow-Munki | General discussion | 13 | 16-08-2004 11:18 AM |
| will a slk800 fit any other sockets other than amd athlon? | dgr | HEXUS.hardware | 5 | 27-10-2003 07:21 PM |