That drives me nuts. We walk through new construction open houses when we can and the builder was hosting one and I flat out asked him why he let the electrician put all the outlets in upside down. He didn't have an answer.Did you put the outlet in the ad upside down too? :lol:
That's ok. Acrobat has a rotate tool.I thought I did but I'm not sure why it didn't posted. :lol:
Anyway, here it is. Sorry about that.
Edit: $#@! it is upside down. I rotated and saved it upright before I attached it. Not sure why it didn't take.
That drives me nuts. We walk through new construction open houses when we can and the builder was hosting one and I flat out asked him why he let the electrician put all the outlets in upside down. He didn't have an answer.Did you put the outlet in the ad upside down too? :lol:![]()
That drives me nuts. We walk through new construction open houses when we can and the builder was hosting one and I flat out asked him why he let the electrician put all the outlets in upside down. He didn't have an answer.Did you put the outlet in the ad upside down too? :lol:![]()
It is (or at least it used to be) in the province of Québec, Canada and it is brilliant. The ground prong protects the current prongs from something falling across the the prongs and creating a short.
I can personally attest to the brilliance of this idea. When I was in college (a *while* ago), I used to do a lot of homework with a steel ruler.... sometimes while sitting in bed. Once, the ruler slipped and fell between the bed and the wall. ZAAAAAAAAP! Yup, there was an outlet behind the bed with a reading light plugged not quite all the way in. The electrical arc was strong enough to burn away the top edge of that ruler. Had the ground been installed 'up', that never would have happened.That drives me nuts. We walk through new construction open houses when we can and the builder was hosting one and I flat out asked him why he let the electrician put all the outlets in upside down. He didn't have an answer.Did you put the outlet in the ad upside down too? :lol:![]()
It is (or at least it used to be) in the province of Québec, Canada and it is brilliant. The ground prong protects the current prongs from something falling across the the prongs and creating a short.
That drives me nuts. We walk through new construction open houses when we can and the builder was hosting one and I flat out asked him why he let the electrician put all the outlets in upside down. He didn't have an answer.Did you put the outlet in the ad upside down too? :lol:![]()
It is (or at least it used to be) in the province of Québec, Canada and it is brilliant. The ground prong protects the current prongs from something falling across the the prongs and creating a short.
Ground on top is a metal cover thing. Here in the east, 90 percent of electricians put the ground on the bottom if there are plastic plates and if it is a metal cover plate you put the ground at the top.