How to wire a 3 prong plug and change your 2 prong outlet to a 3 prong outlet with ground. Learn how to ground an outlet without ground wire plus more 2 prong to 3 prong tips. Read this completely FREE guide on how to install a gfci outlet without ground and find out how to ground a 3 prong outlet that's not grounded. Call us from 8:00am - 6:00pm, 0, 7 2B Medical Road, Ikeja Lagos info@slot.ng. Slot Car Supplies is selling a wide range of slot racing cars and parts from top brands such as NSR and Slot.it. At the best price on the internet.
Between 1920 and 1960, tens of thousands of houses were built in the United States. Almost all of them had two prong outlets. Many of them still do. While the majority of Indiana’s houses were built in the 1990s, there are more than 8,600 currently for sale built between 1920 and 1960 in the Hoosier state. Many more off the market. If you live in a house with two prong outlets, you might want to consider an upgrade. You are at risk for more than inconvenience when you try and plug in your 21st century TV into one of these outlets.
There are two risks associated with two prong outlets: electrocution and power surges. Both of these issues have to do with the fact that the wiring in two prong outlets isn’t grounded. In outlets built since 1962, U.S. electrical code has required all outlets be constructed with a ground wire. This ground wire protects electronics and people from electrical surges and faults by providing a pathway for extra energy to escape the house’s circuitry. When a fault or surge occurs with grounding, the energy travels through the ground wire to the electrical panel. There, it will trip the circuit breaker or blow a fuse, thereby shutting down the circuit before damage (hopefully) occurs. The energy then continues through the ground wire into the earth below the structure, where it dissipates harmlessly.
Without grounding, it’s also impossible to protect your electronics and appliances with surge protectors. Surge protectors work only if they are can connect to a ground wire. Without this wire, they offer no better protection for electronic devices than do multiprong outlets.
Upgrading your home’s electrical system can cost between 5 and 15 percent of your home’s value — a price tag many people cannot afford. With this in mind, regulators determined that homeowners with two prong outlets need not upgrade them. However, that doesn’t mean they’re the safest option.
For more than 50 years, code has required all new construction have grounded, three prong outlets. More recently, U.S. electrical code has required that not only outlets be grounded but that outlets in areas with water present have a GFCI. A GFCI, short for ground-fault circuit interrupter, protects people from electrical shock by cutting off the circuit if a short circuit occurs. (A short circuit is when energy is directed out of the regular circuit pathway through a path with little or no resistance.) If that short circuit occurs because a person is being electrocuted, a GFCI can save their life.
No such protection is available with a two prong outlet.
Two prong outlets also raise flags about other electrical issues that may be present. Homes built before 1965 were built with 30- or 60-amp fuse panels. While 60-amp fuse panels were made with at least one 240-volt wire for larger appliances, 30-amp fuse panels only provide 120-volt wiring, and they are inadequate for modern household electrical needs.
60-amp fuse boxes are problematic because they, too, cannot handle well modern requirements upon electrical systems. In comparison, newly constructed homes today are built with 200-amp circuit breakers (the service panels that replaced fuse boxes).
When there is too much energy running through a wire, the wire heats up, putting the house at risk for fire. Too much energy (electricity) will also blow fuses. You will have to constantly replace if your fuse box’s amperage rating doesn’t meet your needs.
Another problem to be on guard for when two prong outlets are present is the lack of grounding in outlets that have three prongs. If a house has both two and three prong outlets, it means that the three prong outlets were installed for convenience and that they’re not actually grounded. It could also means that only part of your house’s electrical system is grounded.
You will want to test your outlets to find out whether they are grounded or not. If the three prong outlets are not grounded, regulations require that you label them with the words “No Equipment Ground.”
To upgrade your two prong outlets, you cannot simply add a three prong outlet. While this will solve the convenience issue, it will not solve the safety issue.
If you truly want to address your two prong outlets and make them safer, you have four options.
Your first, and best, option is to hire an electrician to rewire your house’s outlets and its electrical panel. If the expense is a concern, consider having your electrician rewire select outlets into which you will plug larger or more sensitive electronic devices, such as a computer or game counsel.
Note that this is not a project you can do yourself. Only a certified electrician has the expertise necessary to run a ground wire from the outlet to the service panel and then properly ground it.
Many two prong outlets were installed in metal boxes. While the circuitry itself wasn’t grounded, these individual boxes oftentimes were. If your house has two prong outlets with metal boxes, it is possible you can ground your outlets without overhauling the wiring.
To find out whether the metal housing is grounded, purchase a circuit tester. Insert one of the tester’s prongs into the hot slot (the shorter slot in the outlet). Put the other prong onto a screw holding the cover plate. If the tester lights up, it means the metal box is grounded.
If the box is grounded, you can install a three prong outlet and ground it by attaching it to the armored, or BX, cable in the back of the box.
The third option to upgrade a two prong outlet is to replace it with a GFCI. While a GFCI will not protect your electronics from power surges, it will protect you from electrocution and short circuits. If you replace your ungrounded, two prong outlet with a GFCI, you must label it with “No Equipment Ground.”
It’s also possible to replace your two prong receptacles with three prong ones and add a GFCI circuit breaker at the service panel. Doing this will likewise protect you from electrocution. If you do this, you will have to label outlets with “GFCI Protected, No Equipment Ground.”
Whatever you decide to do, we recommend having a certified electrician complete your electrical work. Safety is always a concern when working with electricity, and an expert will best take care of your home.
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The company has outlets all over the country. If you are based in Lagos and would like to buy a smartphone, tablet, PC or accessories at Slot Nigeria, visit any of their Lagos branches. The addresses are given below:
Headquarters
No. 2B, Medical Road, Ikeja, Lagos.
Phone: 08034620000, 08096330985, 08055499358, 08055499368
Computer Village branch
15/19, Ola-Ayeni Street, Ikeja, Lagos.
Phone: 08034620000, 08096330985, 08055499358, 08055499368
UNILAG branch
Suite 2, 2001 Cafeteria, New Hall Shopping Complex,
New hall bus stop, UNILAG, Akoka, Yaba, Lagos.
Phone: 08100408549, 08055499411
Apapa branch 1
95, Kofo Abayomi street (Opp Caesar’s palace),
Apapa Wharf, Lagos.
Phone: 08055499364
Apapa branch 2
3, Caulcrick road, off Kofo Abayomi, Apapa, Lagos.
Phone: 07058791027
Ikeja City Mall branch
Ikeja City Mall, Alausa, Ikeja, Lagos.
Phone: 08052506989
Surulere branch
67, Adeniran Ogunsanya street, Surulere, Lagos.
Phone: 08191595440, 08055499365
Oshodi branch
The Nigerian Army Arena,
Arena complex, Shop C5, 01, 02, 19, and 20,
Bolade bus stop, Oshodi, Lagos.
Phone: 08055499410, 08169313791
FESTAC branch
51 road, 512 junction, Festac town, Lagos.
Phone: 07031543570, 08190409086, 08055499416, 08055499417
GSM Village Branch
Block A, Shop 2, Airport Bus Stop, Ikeja, Lagos.
Phone: 07028415477, 08055499378