There’s a reason why kitchen appliances in general have such short 3ft cables. There also a reason why modern kitchens built to code have outlets every 3 ft. Too many people lburned the house down with extension cables strewn across the sink and electrocuted now we can’t have nice things.
Note for the non-americans who use significantly better measuring systems.
Awg = american wire gauge, I.e wire diameter.
18awg = 1mm diameter
16 = 1.3mm
14 = 1.6mm
12 = 2.1mm
Yes smaller numbers are thicker wires.
Besides the electrocution hazard, another problem (in the US) is that someone allowed non fused 16 and 18 gauge extension cables on the market. We should only have 14 and 12 (or start putting fuses on the cords like some other countries)
14 should be for "light duty" like electronics or lamps. What you don't tell people is that pretty much anything inside the house will run fine on 14awg wire.
12 for everything "heavy duty".
The idea is people use the same wire that matches what their breakers are rated for.
A 20amp breaker doesn't know that the 100ft 18 gauge extension cord feeding 3 surge protectors with every kitchen device and the "diy powered garage" is going to melt long before 20amps.
Is it overkill? yes. If you draw too much current will the wire overheat and burn down your house? Not if the breaker trips first.
That's why if you absolutely need an extension cable, you should get one that's just long enough and can handle the current. I have my toaster oven on a heavy duty, 2 foot extension cord because the nearest outlet is just barely too far away. If the cord came out the other end of the toaster oven, I wouldn't need the extension.
Hahaha. Reminds me of one of my own similar fails.
I bought this mop... I'm tallish at 6'. For at least a year I used this mop, cursing it everytime for being short. "What is this? A mop for dwarves?!" literally gave myself a bad back using it.
Until one day, something clicked, and I noticed I could extend it. Fuck my life.
My friends have the same mop as me. My mind was blown when she unscrewed the cap at the end, pulled the mop head off, and threw it in the washer versus how I'd been painstakingly washing in the bathtub and feeling like an idiot because no matter how hard I wrung it out I couldn't get it to dry
That's amazing, thanks for sharing your fail as I feel slightly less dumb now.
One of the best I've seen... was working on a track with a one of my writing partners, he's messaging his gf who's asking where his washing machine powder is, he replies, but the response makes him sigh deeply. Asked him what's wrong, he shows me the message, it's from his gf and says "babe... Do you realise you're washing your clothes with dishwasher tablets?" 😂
If you know how to re-wire stuff properly, it's conceptually an easy process (some devices can be tricky to take apart).
For example, on that toaster you can replace the cable with a longer one, put a new plug on it if that gets worn out, or if absolutely needed splice the cable with another one (that's for when the device can't be opened up for some reason)
Unplug toaster before cutting the power cord, or any other maintenance, such as cleaning the 3 years of crumb its collected.
The most preferred method is to replace the entire cable, the wires connect inside the device somewhere, probably with simple screw terminals. Replace the whole cable and you don't have to worry about any weak points in the splice or insulation, because there are none.
The danger is when you don't know how electricity and wiring works or get lazy and take shortcuts.
There's a bunch that can go wrong, some of them have potentially life ending consequences, which is why it's a bad idea to work on electronics...unless you take the time to learn how they work and be smart about it.
Have no idea about those standards to be honest, all sorts of Chinese shit appliances get imported here, I don't think we have a code that regulates that.