Live wire campervanners

Mitsi Fendt
Mitsi Fendt Forum Participant Posts: 484
100 Comments
edited July 2016 in Caravan & Motorhome Chat #1

At present on a site in Ireland. just waleked past at least 4 pitches where the camper van is out and the EHU cable has been left plugged into the post and probably therefore live.. Is this practise not a little foolhardy?

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Comments

  • Tinwheeler
    Tinwheeler Forum Participant Posts: 23,149 ✭✭✭
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    edited July 2016 #2

    As has been said before, it depends whether they've deactivated the power via the push button, if one exists. 

     

  • Justus2
    Justus2 Forum Participant Posts: 897
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    edited July 2016 #3

    I've pressed the red button when I've gone out and come back to find some busy body has unplugged it and allowed the plug to get wet as a result..I wish people would mind their own business  l !

  • huskydog
    huskydog Club Member Posts: 5,460 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited July 2016 #4

    I leave the cable plunged in and switched off (if poss) and then plug a spare socket in the end ,that way no one can poke their fingers in it ,should they have nothing better to do ........

  • QFour
    QFour Forum Participant Posts: 442
    edited July 2016 #5

    Only if some busy body goes and lifts the little flap and sticks his fingers in. Nothing to do with anyone else.

  • Justus2
    Justus2 Forum Participant Posts: 897
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    edited July 2016 #6

    If you unplug the lead the plug end, without the flap, can get wet. These leads are designed for outdoor use. The important thing is to keep the socket end, with the flap above ground level so it has no chance of ending up in a puddle if it rains. My pitch,
    my lead, my choice , what others do is up to them, none of my business ..As to people possibly lifting the flap..every bollard on site also has a live under the little flap !

  • Wildwood
    Wildwood Club Member Posts: 3,582
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    edited July 2016 #7

    If you unplug the lead the plug end, without the flap, can get wet. These leads are designed for outdoor use. The important thing is to keep the socket end, with the flap above ground level so it has no chance of ending up in a puddle if it rains. My pitch,
    my lead, my choice , what others do is up to them, none of my business ..As to people possibly lifting the flap..every bollard on site also has a live under the little flap !

    The bollards are female couplings so the live terminals are recessed and very unlikely little fingers can get at them. If you leave the cable plugged in the male terminals at the end are live and are simply dangerous. One day a child will be killed or seriously
    injured by one. 

    For safety reasons cables should not be left plugged in and for the effort it takes to remove them it baffles me why people just leave them lying around. All you need is a sign to show you are using the pitch.

  • Navigateur
    Navigateur Club Member Posts: 3,880 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited July 2016 #8

    If you leave the cable plugged in the male terminals at the end are live and are simply dangerous.

    I just cannot visualise that - unless someone has been at work with a screwdriver..

  • Navigateur
    Navigateur Club Member Posts: 3,880 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited July 2016 #9

    My pitch, my lead, my choice , what others do is up to them, none of my business .

    Oh yes it is!  My country, my government, my laws.  What others do has to be regulated to protect against stupidity.   These connectors ARE NOT WATERPROOF!  It rains, it puddles, it floods.   One does not need to actually touch such a connector lying on
    the ground to be killed.

    If motorcarvanners/campervanners are too lazy to take their lead with them then I recon it is fair game for them to come back and find it safely unplugged and stacked in neat three foot lengths.

  • EmilysDad
    EmilysDad Forum Participant Posts: 8,973
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    edited July 2016 #10

     ......

    If motorcarvanners/campervanners are too lazy to take their lead with them then I  ....

    Is it laziness or just used as an indication that the pitch is in use? It seems to me that you always think the worst of people in general

  • Justus2
    Justus2 Forum Participant Posts: 897
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    edited July 2016 #11

    All site electrics are protected by RCD trips, no danger really,but encouraging criminal damage is quite shocking,cutting members leads up ??? Really??

  • hitchglitch
    hitchglitch Forum Participant Posts: 3,007
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    edited July 2016 #12

    The sites we stay on (mainly overseas) never have the red button so I would assume that any cable left connected is live and that is potentially dangerous. As has been said, the sockets are not waterproof and a child (or pet) could easily start messing around with it. Would you trust somebody's life to the rcd working (assuming your Italian bollard has one)?

    I think I would be tempted to disconnect the lead if I saw it plugged in. As a former electrical engineer it is difficult to ignore an unsafe situation.

    Of course, you are supposed to plug the van in first and also have the main isolator off, not sure I do that all the time!

  • bigherb
    bigherb Forum Participant Posts: 65
    edited July 2016 #13

    My pitch, my lead, my choice , what others do is up to them, none of my business .

    Oh yes it is!  My country, my government, my laws.  What others do has to be regulated to protect against stupidity.   These connectors ARE NOT WATERPROOF!  It rains, it puddles, it floods.   One does not need to actually touch such a connector lying on the ground to be killed.

    If motorcarvanners/campervanners are too lazy to take their lead with them then I recon it is fair game for them to come back and find it safely unplugged and stacked in neat three foot lengths.

    Not sure there is a law that says you have to disconnect the hookup lead.

    I and a lot of other campervans use waterproof plugs. Yes waterproof in that they can be submerged.

     

    Is there anybody that has a hand big enough to unscrew the flap and then be able to poke their fingers down a 6mm hole to reach the live pin recessed 19mm down that hole?

  • EasyT
    EasyT Forum Participant Posts: 16,194
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    edited July 2016 #14

    I have seen a kiddie of abot 4 playing with the caravan end of a EHU cable left plugged in when at Tragedar (sp) House a few years ago. Yep the child may have been protected by RCD but I unpluged the cable. And yes the child should have been better supervised but .............. better safe!

  • JVB66
    JVB66 Forum Participant Posts: 22,892
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    edited July 2016 #15

    I think you will find that most wardens if noticeing a lead stiil plugged into a bollard because the "owner" could not walk that far to unplug will press the switch and unplug,I think it state in most handbooks and info that on plugging in you connect to
    leisure vehicle first then to bollard,as it is a known fact that if the other way round the live end can arc on plugging in or removeing

  • Unknown
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    edited July 2016 #16
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  • Unknown
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    edited July 2016 #17
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  • hitchglitch
    hitchglitch Forum Participant Posts: 3,007
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    edited July 2016 #18

    Not sure about the arcing comment, is it better to have an arc when connecting to the EHU or the van? I think it is mainly that if you plug into the EHU first you are wandering around with a live lead. Best practice is to switch off the mains incoming switch
    in the van first. If there is a fault it will be evident when you close the switch and the arc fault (if there is one) should be contained in the switch rather than you hand. So the correct sequence as stated in all the handbooks etc. is:

    Switch off main isolator in the van

    Connect lead to van

    Connect lead to bollard

    Switch on van isolator.

     

  • Wildwood
    Wildwood Club Member Posts: 3,582
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    edited July 2016 #19

     ......

    If motorcarvanners/campervanners are too lazy to take their lead with them then I  ....

    Is it laziness or just used as an indication that the pitch is in use? It seems to me that you always think the worst of people in general

    It is no way to show a pitch is taken. The correct way is a sign although a few chairs or similar is acceptable but a live cable is certainly not.

  • Unknown
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    edited July 2016 #20
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  • hitchglitch
    hitchglitch Forum Participant Posts: 3,007
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    edited July 2016 #21

    As a first time motorhomers this year (after 30 years plus caravanning) we stayed on one site in France for two weeks (the weather was bad everywhere else). I marked the position of the wheels, left table and chairs out and hook-up lead roughly in position
    and unplugged from bollard. Returned later in the day to almost exactly the same spot so that I could connect the canopy tie-down straps without removing the pegs. Seemed to work.

  • EmilysDad
    EmilysDad Forum Participant Posts: 8,973
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    edited July 2016 #22

     .... The correct way is a sign although a few chairs or similar is acceptable but a live cable is certainly not.

    I never realised there was a 'correct way' ... just a suggested way ..... & I didn't mention anything specifically about the cable being live or not

  • Alphonso Delard
    Alphonso Delard Forum Participant Posts: 36
    edited July 2016 #23

    Sorry OP, as it's not quite on subject, but should I always be turning the mains off in our caravan then? I always plug the van in first, then connect to the bollard, and vice versa when packing away, but I never turn off the mains on the isolator in the van?

    Should I be starting a new thread for this or am I OK to post the question here?

  • hitchglitch
    hitchglitch Forum Participant Posts: 3,007
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    edited July 2016 #24

    Sorry OP, as it's not quite on subject, but should I always be turning the mains off in our caravan then? I always plug the van in first, then connect to the bollard, and vice versa when packing away, but I never turn off the mains on the isolator in the
    van?

    Should I be starting a new thread for this or am I OK to post the question here?

    The correct procedure is as I described above so, yes, you should turn off the mains switch in the van first. Not many do though and that includes me as an Electrical Engineer! 

  • jennyc
    jennyc Forum Participant Posts: 957
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    edited July 2016 #25

    Not sure about the arcing comment, is it better to have an arc when connecting to the EHU or the van? I think it is mainly that if you plug into the EHU first you are wandering around with a live lead. Best practice is to switch off the mains incoming switch in the van first. If there is a fault it will be evident when you close the switch and the arc fault (if there is one) should be contained in the switch rather than you hand. So the correct sequence as stated in all the handbooks etc. is:

    Switch off main isolator in the van

    Connect lead to van

    Connect lead to bollard

    Switch on van isolator.

     

    Write your comments here...

    I wander around my house with a live vacuum cleaner lead on a regular basis, now add in my domestic iron, hair dryer, food mixer etc. Are you suggesting that this is unacceptably dangerous?

  • Unknown
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    edited July 2016 #26
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  • SteveL
    SteveL Club Member Posts: 12,311 ✭✭✭
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    edited July 2016 #27

     

    I wander around my house with a live vacuum cleaner lead on a regular basis, now add in my domestic iron, hair dryer, food mixer etc. Are you suggesting that this is unacceptably dangerous?

    A very valid point, if your cutting the grass and something needs adjusting on the mower. How many of us wander back to the plug to switch off. Or more likely just unplug the lead from the machine.

  • EmilysDad
    EmilysDad Forum Participant Posts: 8,973
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    edited July 2016 #28

    ..... Or more likely just unplug the lead from the machine.

    I can't ... it has it's own cable. The two pin plug & socket for garden tools has been generally faded out due to when people replace them for what ever reason, they wire the plug & socket back to front ie they put the plug on the live side  the socket on
    the tool. In normal use they get away with it, until they get pulled apart and then there's a plug on the wet grass with live pins

  • EmilysDad
    EmilysDad Forum Participant Posts: 8,973
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    edited July 2016 #29

     ....

    I wander around my house with a live vacuum cleaner lead on a regular basis, now add in my domestic iron, hair dryer, food mixer etc. Are you suggesting that this is unacceptably dangerous?

    But there is an appliance on the end of each cable with its own on/off switch that is designed to make/break a supply

  • jennyc
    jennyc Forum Participant Posts: 957
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    edited July 2016 #30

     ....

    I wander around my house with a live vacuum cleaner lead on a regular basis, now add in my domestic iron, hair dryer, food mixer etc. Are you suggesting that this is unacceptably dangerous?

    But there is an appliance on the end of each cable with its own on/off switch that is designed to make/break a supply

    Write your comments here...

    How does an appliance connected to the end of a flexible cable make it safer than a properly engineered socket with a spring loaded cover? My iron doesn't have an on/ off switch, just a thermostat.

  • JVB66
    JVB66 Forum Participant Posts: 22,892
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    edited July 2016 #31

     ....

    I wander around my house with a live vacuum cleaner lead on a regular basis, now add in my domestic iron, hair dryer, food mixer etc. Are you suggesting that this is unacceptably dangerous?

    But there is an appliance on the end of each cable with its own on/off switch that is designed to make/break a supply

    Write your comments here...

    How does an appliance connected to the end of a flexible cable make it safer than a properly engineered socket with a spring loaded cover? My iron doesn't have an on/ off switch, just a thermostat.

    ...You iron wnen control turned to zero is switched off