They’re like that in this apartment we’re renting and I keep seeing them elsewhere. I don’t get it.

    • Skua
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      95 months ago

      No, unless something is very wrong. I don’t know if that was maybe a bigger problem with older devices though. I remember being taught to turn the socket off before plugging things in or taking them out when I was a kid

    • Flying SquidOP
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      165 months ago

      I’ve definitely had that happen to me, sort of at random, in the U.S.

      But it doesn’t seem to have any effect. It’s not like a gigantic spark and it’s pretty contained.

        • @[email protected]
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          85 months ago

          Laptop power bricks is probably where I see it most. Or if you plug in something with a motor already switched on. Listen for a soft popping noise if you plug in a big power brick.

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            15 months ago

            You’re right, now that I think about it. Laptop power does it more than anything else.

            • @[email protected]
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              35 months ago

              Many, many big power-smoothing capacitors inside those jumping from 0 to 120V in a microsecond, that’s why. The better-smoothed the power supply, the more capacitors and the bigger the sparks tend to be, although some really high quality ones put most of them behind inrush-current limiters to reduce the sparking, but that can also marginally reduce efficiency. High power electronics are always a bit of a tradeoff. The problem is that capacitors charge and discharge almost instantly in most cases, and when empty they act like a short circuit until they’re filled, so they can create some pretty big sparks, even though the actual energy going in is minuscule by any reasonable measurement. It’s almost like a static shock, huge spark, tiny energy.

              Some motors will also spark badly when disconnected, but the reason is slightly different. They have a huge electromagnetic field which suddenly fills or collapses and that inductance in the coils can draw a lot of amps on startup and generate some pretty high voltages, more than enough to spark across the gap. Like the capacitors, they are very nearly a short circuit until they start moving.

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          45 months ago

          Home electricity in North America has roughly half the voltage as elsewhere in the world, and double the voltage is double the arcing potential, so that figures.

    • bluGill
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      65 months ago

      All will if there is a load. Doesn’t matter ac of dc or even load. Plug an ethernet cable in and there will be a spark.

      Most of the time the spark is tiny and you need a good lab to measure it though.