I, before, wrote:And to add to the high-resistance brigade, another mysterious entrant. Its plug only has the rating "10A 250V" (yeah, right) faintly marked, the cable is marked with:
XD RVV WGX3C P.V.C WIRE B
And the socket is marked with "KKCK" on one surface and "KKS-10A" on the other. Resistance measures about 0.4Ω each on live and neutral and about 0.9Ω on earth; I haven't made an exact measurement, but it seems to be about 1.8m long. 0.1mm² or whereabouts?
Just as I suspected, this cord blew up under a short circuit (which I boldly made on purpose — I wasn't foolish enough to attempt to
use it).
The test setup consisted of a bog-standard 3m extension cord plugged into the outlet (on a C16 circuit breaker), with the counterfeit plugged into the XC's socket and…remember that chain of cords I ran that heater through? It turns out that the cord I fitted that socket (a white Clipsal 438) to is a bit too thin for the 438 to clamp onto tightly (it's a light-duty 0.75mm² type, though with a thicker sheath than some; besides, it's black), so I found an ordinary-duty white cord salvaged from a cheapo PC speaker set and attached the 438 to that. Anyway, for the experiment, I stripped the insulation from the former cord's brown and blue wires, twisted the conductors together, and inserted them into a "Eurostyle" terminal strip (those
are insulated enough to protect fingers from making contact, so that's a start), then inserted the plug into the counterfeit's socket (which is much too loose). Switched on at the outlet and the counterfeit cord proceeded to melt through its insulation and sheathing, exposing wire strands
. Subsequent autopsy revealed the earth wire to be about 24AWG (the other two are rather charred) — though even that is much larger than the resistance would have suggested
. The rest of the setup is all but undamaged (save for a bit of what seems to be molten plastic deposited where the other cords mated with the counterfeit), though I should probably find something to do with that black cord (and a bunch of others — so feel free to sue me
) before anyone else finds it, plugs it in, and electrocutes themselves with the wires (I suppose clamping the conductors in
separate parts of the strip would be a start).
So there you have it: If something connected to the mains with a counterfeit cord goes short-circuit and you're touching the counterfeit cord at the time, you're dead (if the circuit isn't protected by an RCD).
Information is far more fragile than the HDDs it's stored on. Being an afterthought is no excuse for a bad product.
My PC: Core i3 4130 on GA‑H87M‑D3H with GT640 OC 2GiB and 2 * 8GiB Kingston HyperX 1600MHz, Kingston SA400S37120G and WD3003FZEX‑00Z4SA0, Pioneer BDR‑209DBKS and Optiarc AD‑7200S, Seasonic G‑360, Chenbro PC31031, Linux Mint Cinnamon 20.3.