- Apr 7, 2003
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Retailer near me is having a pretty good sale on 2-prong, 14 gauge outdoor extension cords. 90 feet for $10. But before I pick up a couple, I was hoping you smarty-pants might be able to help me out with some safety questions!
This is my understanding of how this stuff works:
3-prong cords are used to ground the enclosure of the powered device to prevent any potential electrocution hazard. Any errant current that manages to charge the enclosure is just grounded back down the cord instead of through the person touching the appliance. GFCI outlets are like "smart" three prongs, in that they monitor the amount of current flowing out of the wall on the hot wire and the amount of current returning via the neutral/ground wire. If there's a discrepancy (indicating that some of the current is being grounded elsewhere, e.g. through a person), it cuts the power.
Ok, so assuming that's a correct understanding, am I decreasing my safety margin by using a 2-prong extension cord instead of a 3-prong cord with a GFCI outlet? The only difference I can imagine is that with a 3-prong, I'd theoretically never be shocked, because the moment an errant wire grounds to the enclosure, it'd just be grounded back to the earth ground anyway. With a GFCI, I might get shocked, as there'd be a delay between when the current grounds through me and when the discrepancy is picked up by the GFCI outlet. It'd be such a small period of time, though, that I can't imagine it'd make a tangible difference.
And m8's -- feel free to call me a retard if my understanding is totally ignorant, but at least explain why. Cheers!
This is my understanding of how this stuff works:
3-prong cords are used to ground the enclosure of the powered device to prevent any potential electrocution hazard. Any errant current that manages to charge the enclosure is just grounded back down the cord instead of through the person touching the appliance. GFCI outlets are like "smart" three prongs, in that they monitor the amount of current flowing out of the wall on the hot wire and the amount of current returning via the neutral/ground wire. If there's a discrepancy (indicating that some of the current is being grounded elsewhere, e.g. through a person), it cuts the power.
Ok, so assuming that's a correct understanding, am I decreasing my safety margin by using a 2-prong extension cord instead of a 3-prong cord with a GFCI outlet? The only difference I can imagine is that with a 3-prong, I'd theoretically never be shocked, because the moment an errant wire grounds to the enclosure, it'd just be grounded back to the earth ground anyway. With a GFCI, I might get shocked, as there'd be a delay between when the current grounds through me and when the discrepancy is picked up by the GFCI outlet. It'd be such a small period of time, though, that I can't imagine it'd make a tangible difference.
And m8's -- feel free to call me a retard if my understanding is totally ignorant, but at least explain why. Cheers!