We still have a little bit of the convolution left here.
The current plugs,
BS1363, came in in the 50's but there are still the old round pin
BS546 plugs and sockets. They are pretty much all gone from houses, althought the 15amp version is still a standard for live event lighting, it is dieing out due to dimmer packs being replaced with LED fixtures.
Oh and we do have a 2 pin shaver
plug and sockets. These are the only type allowed in wet areas (bathrooms) and are only commonly found in hotels. These accept american plugs and then immediatly blow the transformer/fuse as they are only rated for 0.2amp and won't power hair straightners.
R Scott wrote:Some are three prong just like the UK, black white and green/bare. Some are four prong, black red white green, because the clock and controls run on 120.
Why run the controls on 120V? If everything runs on 240v it can be freely exported and imported across most of the world. Probably not a permie way of thinking but it make no corporate sense to use 2 different power standards in one device.
The industrial standards here are europe wide with many options. You can have 16amp, 30amp, 63amp... , 110V, 220V, 415V... At least the voltages are colour coded, yellow plugs for 110V, blue for 220V and red for 415V.
You'll see I switch between 240V and 220V, that's because before harmonisation, the UK standard was based on 240V and Britain still uses that standard. 220V comes from europe but the permissable voltage range is wide enough that the british standard fits inside that range.
It's good fun looking at american equipment and having to remember that black is live. Pre-harmonisation, black was neutral and red live, this is still very common in domestic wiring.