by Kingcoal » Sun 21 Oct 2007, 09:51:37
There is a long story as to how the polarized plug came into existence. The short story is that back in the 50's and 60's, the design of a lot of low end electrical products was haphazard by modern standards. The polarized plug was invented to make sure that the device, generally a cheap TV set, stereo, etc, could only be plugged into an outlet which is polarized (a lot of old house wiring didn't even use polarized outlets.) These cheap products with polarized plugs didn't have a transformer to provide isolation in their main power supply. Instead, they would simply connect the AC neutral wire directly to the metal chassis! By modern electrical engineering standards this is not only considered dangerous, but criminally negligent. The problem occurred when for some reason, the plug either got plugged in reversed, or the outlet was reversed (a common problem back in the day.) In this condition, the hot AC line was now connected to the chassis and your electrical product was now "hot" and you could get a shock if you touched it and somehow completed a circuit to ground. Higher end products had transformers and omitted the polarized plug. Other types of products, such as table lamps didn't need to connect any conductors to the chassis, so they were safe.
Since the 70's and the establishment of the National Electrical code and the Underwriters Laboratory, the two prong, polarized plug is something of an artifact. In modern equipment, if the chassis is to be grounded, then a three prong plug is used. The third prong is connected to earth ground only in the house wiring. Modern electrical engineers don't even trust that, so items such as hair dryers and power tools are made of plastic and are "double insulated" so that the user has absolutely no possibility of coming in contact with any conductors. A lot of medical equipment uses grounded metal chassis and the standards for those are very strict, but that's beyond the scope here.
A two prong, non polarized plug can be safe if the products plugged into it are double insulated. Double insulation is an industry term for a design standard which insures that there is no way that anything touching the outside of the product can make connection with an AC conductor.
"That's the problem with mercy, kid... It just ain't professional" - Fast Eddie, The Color of Money