I’ve always known these with pins, or are they replaced by those two tiny plates on the side?
Edit: example of one of the most sold models https://www.benl.ebay.be/itm/387671120546
Each country developed its own plug system in Europe. This looks like a French CEE 7 type plug - its asymmetrical fixed earth point creates wiring compatibility problems where the poles are wired differently in different countries. A lot of domestic appliances now use the German Schuko plug type as an answer to this problem (the earth is on the circumference edge pins)
It’s two variants of the European socket (type E and type F), nowadays most plugs are compatible with both versions so you can buy either one. Just check your plugs before.
Here is an illustration of both sockets:
Type E
Type F
You need to buy the one that corresponds to the standard where you live. The same as the ones on your walls. If you buy the wrong one it will work most of the time but create massive frustration every once in a while.
This is a french type socket, one with tiny plates in the side is called schuko
Brits watching this unfold with popcorn…
UK plugs are superior.
Until you accidentally step on one.
That’s why they are superior!
They are not designed for this purpose.
Not with that attitude!
It’s not my volt.
I thought Britain uses pound square foot square fortnight per Coulomb instead of Volt?
If you don’t know what you’re doing I suggest you don’t buy a jukebox online but at a local store. That way you’re probably on the safe side. The link one looks like the German version and your post pic is France/Belgium. They’re not (edit: always) compatible. Plugs are a non-EU-standardized mess.
They’re sometimes compatible. I have French style plugs in Belgium, but most of my devices have both a hole and side connectors to be cross-compatible.
I’ve moved from Belgium to the Netherlands (so the standard you show to the one with 2 grounding things at the top and bottom). Every single plug was compatible and usable without issue. The ONLY issue with the plugs here is that they can’t handle as high of a load as the Belgian ones. The best part about these are that you can plug it in both ways which is soooo convenient!
Oh god, imagine USB-A’ing your electrical outlets.
*shudders in german*
The only benefit I got from it was being able to charge my car with a powerplug
Yes, if your plug looks like this, the new ones will do.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5d/CEE_7-7.jpg/500px-CEE_7-7.jpg
Ground goes from the pin on the one you already have into the plug, or through the tiny plates on the side.
More info in here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schuko
there multiple types of schuko systems
Hello, the pin showed in the image is the ground. Though the one with the benl link is also with a ground. You can see it in the picture its a piece of metal shown in the inner diameter of the female plug. You should be aware that if your male plug is not provided with this connector, your either can’t connect it to this socket or you will not have a ground.
Buy them in Czech Republic. On the other hand, must plugs support grounding from the side.