Where would you insert them if the pins were full size?Really ? As I say, it's not a device I'm familiar with - but from the picture and comments it would appear to be a device designed to open the shutters and allow probes to be inserted.
Maybe it can, maybe it can't.I see no reason why a device of that type cannot be made to conform to the dimensional requirements of BS1363, other than requiring holes in the sides of the pins to allow access to the contacts.
But the fact is it isn't, and it's not required to.
Are you, or anybody, ever going to address the question of does it damage sockets because they have features required by BS 1363, or does it damage them because they have features not required by BS 1363 which the maker just decided to add?Or put another way, one could be designed such that it would not damage ANY socket correctly designed to take BS1363 plugs.
Don't be an idiot.As long as we're arguing that it's the socket manufacturers fault if something that doesn't even attempt to comply with the dimensional requirements of BS1363, then I'm off to try opening the shutters of a socket with one of these and then see if the socket manufacturer takes any responsibility.
According to you, one of these should be just fine, and if it damages a socket then it's the socket manufacturers fault.
So is that socket opener, unless you can show me a standard it is supposed to comply with and does not.No, in that case, the fuel being used by users IS to standard
Yes, because they chose to make an engine which would be damaged by fuel which met the applicable standards.and the engine was not suitable for use with it - and you'll note that BMW accepted it was their problem.
No - the device in question does not fail to comply with any applicable standards.In the case of the device you are attempting to defend, it is the equivalent of the fuel being wrong - ie a**e about tit again.
I'm not digging a hole - I'm shovelling dirt onto you, and I will keep on doing it until you tell me if this device damages sockets only where the maker has chosen to do something he was not required to do. For him to say that his socket would not be damaged by a BS 1363 compliant device is no defence, for he knows that there are other devices which are made and sold, quite lawfully, to be inserted into sockets (unlike chisels, you idiot). If what he did was not as a consequence of conforming to BS 1363 then the appropriate response is to warn of unsuitable devices, not to outlaw them if they would not damage any socket which complied with BS 1363 with no embellishments.There is a saying that when you are in a hole, stop digging. On the other hand, if you keep digging, you'll soon be out of sight and we can ignore you![]()
