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Interlocked IEC 60309 sockets

I am looking at an existing design which we will be repeating a few times. It includes various sockets from 32A to 125A; all of them are interlocked IEC60309 type.

I cannot see a reason for them to be interlocked. What is the reason for an interlock anyway? I suppose it could be to stop people from poking their fingers into the female ‘pins’ of a live 125A socket but I'm pretty sure they're too small (standard IEC finger is 12mm). There is also the risk of them being disconnected under load and drawing an arc, but that seems a bit of a small risk to me unless in an EX zone, in which case, I'd imagine they're not allowed at all.

Does anyone know the  reason for the interlock and when it is needed? Particularly in the case of 125A?

 

thanks

Parents
  • It varies - sometimes it is in lieu of shutters - e.g. caravan sockets now have to be interlocked in some way (to prevent children poking things into live contact tubes) to give a similar level of safety to domestic sockets and for larger sizes (>32A) it's because the contacts aren't rated for functional switching of load currents (probably more due to the damage to the contact surfaces by repeated arcing events than any direct hazard from the arcing itself).

      - Andy.

Reply
  • It varies - sometimes it is in lieu of shutters - e.g. caravan sockets now have to be interlocked in some way (to prevent children poking things into live contact tubes) to give a similar level of safety to domestic sockets and for larger sizes (>32A) it's because the contacts aren't rated for functional switching of load currents (probably more due to the damage to the contact surfaces by repeated arcing events than any direct hazard from the arcing itself).

      - Andy.

Children
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