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Coming week I'm visiting Boston for a meeting, so I bought a power adaptor. I just realized it's an earthed one, so it has three pins. Will I be able to use that on all the power plugs, or should I get a two-pinned adaptor?
Newer outlets will have three plugs (we call it grounded in the US), older outlets won't, so a two prong would give you more options.Monique said:Coming week I'm visiting Boston for a meeting, so I bought a power adaptor. I just realized it's an earthed one, so it has three pins. Will I be able to use that on all the power plugs, or should I get a two-pinned adaptor?
Excellent idea dl! Monique, these are just pennies at any hardware store here, is there someone in Boston you can ask to get you one?dlgoff said:Just get one of these to plug your adapter into when needed.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheater_plug
The adaptor must be British then, it says EarthedEvo said:Newer outlets will have three plugs (we call it grounded in the US), older outlets won't, so a two prong would give you more options.
Monique said:The adaptor must be British then, it says EarthedWhen I was in London the other week the hotel check-in person corrected me when I asked for the elevator, "we call that a lift over here"
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Mark44 said:Monique, I'm not sure where you're staying in Boston - hotel or with friends - but any place with reasonably to-code receptacles have the sockets that take three pins. .
No, I need an adapter so that the power cord will fit the socket. The converter that's attached to computer/telephone power cords is already designed to take 100-220V 50/60Hz.russ_watters said:The wording here matters: a converter changes voltage but an adapter doesn't. You probably need a converter.