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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Packets of socket covers should make it very clear that they are not a safety product

45 replies

duchesse · 06/10/2010 14:24

My friend told me the other day that if we wanted to be foster parents, we would have to abide by all standard safety rules, including socket covers.

Don't get me wrong, I can totally see the point of stair gates when receiving other people's toddlers into your house- you have no idea what the child's experience of stairs will have been.

But I would be mightily teed off to be obliged to install something in my house that at best does nothing but could at worst create danger.

Manufacturers of these things are less than candid about their dubious benefits, and state institutions (SS, children's centres, etc) seem to be unaware that they are at best unnecessary.

I just think that manufacturers should be obliged to state on the packaging that UK sockets do not need them. AIBU?

OP posts:
Flisspaps · 06/10/2010 14:26

RoSPA don't recommend them

Poogles · 06/10/2010 14:29

We have them all over the house. Assumed you needed them! Why aren't they needed in the UK?

MaeMobley · 06/10/2010 14:30

RoSPA discourages the use of decorated covers.

RubberDuck · 06/10/2010 14:31

It depends so much on the child too.

Ds1 pretty much avoided sockets and it was never an issue. Ds2 was fascinated no matter how much we tried to keep him away and would happily play with switches and poke stuff into the holes. Got socket covers for that limited time with ds2 as it seemed the lower risk.

MaeMobley · 06/10/2010 14:31

At the age of 5 I stuck a wire coat hanger into a socket -not good.

duchesse · 06/10/2010 14:32

from that RoSPA page (my arrows):

Protective Plastic Covers for 13-amp Socket Outlets

RoSPA recommends that small children are warned to keep away from electrical equipment until they are capable of understanding the risks and are able to use it safely.

-->Modern 13-amp power sockets made to BS 1363:1995 incorporate a shutter mechanism, which prevent inappropriate access to the live connectors. RoSPA therefore does not consider it necessary to recommend the use of socket covers.

OP posts:
anonacfr · 06/10/2010 14:32

How can socket covers create danger?

MaeMobley · 06/10/2010 14:32

How do covers create danger?

duchesse · 06/10/2010 14:33

Mae you would have had to stick 3 coat hangers in the socket - one in each hole- to get a shock.

OP posts:
Poogles · 06/10/2010 14:33

At least we have boring white ones!

MaeMobley · 06/10/2010 14:33

DECORATED

RubberDuck · 06/10/2010 14:33

They interfere with the safety already built into the design of our wall sockets, Poogles.

www.fatallyflawed.org.uk/index.html

massivemammaries · 06/10/2010 14:33

because the live and neutral cannot open unless the earth pin is fully inserted. It is impossible for a childs fingers to touch anything dangerous unless they have a handy socket cover which can be inserted upside down.................

Habbibu · 06/10/2010 14:34

here - they can undermine an existing safety feature.

MaeMobley · 06/10/2010 14:34

I did get a shock but it was the Seventies and it was France so only 2 holes.

duchesse · 06/10/2010 14:34

This explains it more clearly than I could

OP posts:
MaeMobley · 06/10/2010 14:35

Sorry, not sure why the Seventies would be relevant!

RubberDuck · 06/10/2010 14:35

Basically they remove the contact covers and expose the live parts of the plug, so if the socket cover is badly designed, it can actually make it easier to poke stuff in there and get electrocuted.

oneofthosedays · 06/10/2010 14:35

Presumably they stop your toddler shoving something long, pointy and possible metal into a socket and electrocuting themselves?

ROSPA don't say the covers themselves are dangerous, just that they may attract more attention to the sockets. We have them at the insistance of DH but the kids have never really shown in interest in them anyway. We've never had locks on the kitchen cupboards either, even, shock horror, the cleaning cupboard!! Medicines are kept way up high.

duchesse · 06/10/2010 14:36

It is sort of relevant actually Mae, because modern European sockets have an earth hole as well now. Except they still don't have the same safety mechanism as we do in the UK.

OP posts:
nocake · 06/10/2010 14:37

Another person talking sense Smile

UK sockets are designed to be safe and it is very, very difficult for a child to come into contact with any live parts. If you combine them with a modern switch board it is impossible to get a shock even if the child does manage to get through the safety shutter.

RubberDuck · 06/10/2010 14:39

No, some of the socket covers DONT prevent something long pointy and metal into a socket - you need to check the position of the prongs compared to the edge of the cover and how flush the cover is.

As I say, we only bothered because ds2 had an unnatural fixation and it seemed the lesser of two evils.

massivemammaries · 06/10/2010 14:40

Mae you would have had to stick 3 coat hangers in the socket - one in each hole- to get a shock

Not true actually. you only need to come into contact with the live to get a shock so if the earth pin is inserted or the shutter is damaged then a coat hanger in a socket could easily be lethal. The shutters have only been fitted to sockets for about the last 15 years so if the house is due a rewire then socket covers are a very good idea

nocake · 06/10/2010 14:41

A safer option, if you have older sockets, is to replace them with modern sockets.

oneofthosedays · 06/10/2010 14:43

Ok I'm sold after reading the fatallyflawed website - I'm binning all mine. Read the cover review on the website, it goes through all the different makes of socket covers.

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