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Halon extinguishers also stop life as well as fires and where used there is a strict access code to ensure it is turned off before anyone enters.
The world is full of rooms, and entire buildings, housing unattended kit running 24x7. Yes, they do have automatic fire suppression systems, but these don't get deployed very often.What's the best way to prevent electrical fires being started by CCTV, PSUs, and other comms equipment which need to run 24/7 unattended?
it's not the first time I've had this type of incident with a PSU.
A PSU with a good earthing arrangement under fault conditions may only have to carry 30 mA of fault current before an RCD operates.
So no symbols for UL, CSA etc. And no CE, as in Conformité Européenne, mark either. That PSU is illegal here - it should not have been on sale.Here's how it looked afterwards, with label visible:
Yup. And some of them are even legal, and safe, and have genuine CE marks, not fake ones like that one had.While I agree with the sentiments towards Chinese manufactured goods, the paradox is that almost all electrical items are manufactured in China nowadays.
And fires are a lot cheaper than that, too, aren't they.£75 is a bit much for PSUs used in the home
Yes - you do need to make sure you keep money back for replacing possessions, paying for funerals etc.the features and principles of the items in your link are ones that I can adopt without breaking the budget.
Ooh - another one with no CE, UL, CSA etc marks.I already have this similar PSU that I never found a use for yet. It has an earth connection and built-in fuse:
It will certainly help it to overheat.I'm thinking of fitting it to the inside of a cheap combination key safe, such as in eBay item #361193885359 (£12) and using intumescent sealant where cables enter and exit. That should do the trick, shouldn't it?
Given its size and wide range of input voltages it has to be.Do you know if this PSU is a switched-mode PSU?
Chinese imports are a problem where they do not conform with safety standards however they are cheap.
Avoid cheap ( and therefor often nasty ) equipment.
Prevention is better than cure - as Bernard says, start by stopping buying cheap and flaky equipment.
your first step should be to replace all of your dodgy PSUs with reputable ones.
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