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Am I going crazy? Wall mounted female generator inlet connector?

Edit:

Thanks for the unambiguous answers. As I said in the reply, he's a nice chap and very helpful and I cannot abide grassing people up unless there's a very good reason.

So I did just say: "I'm not being funny, but most of the generator websites seem to sell male inlets. It might be worth phoning your bloke from your professional body and just asking him"
I left out the fact I'd checked here to save some face.

That seemed well received and it was the most diplomatic I've ever been in my life. Hopefully he does then he can get an informed answer from his org.

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Am I going crazy or is this normal?

Registered sparky adding a transfer switch and genny inlet on my house plus amending the earthing arrangements to suit.

He's just fitted a 32A *female* commando wall inlet.


Which to my mind means the potential for unplugging the house end lead to a running generator, and then holding a male plug with exposed live pins.


I'm pretty sure I'm right that the inlet on the house feeding the transfer switch should be male.

But my brain has just imploded and I'd sure like to hear it from someone else...


Cheers...

Parents
  • You are not going crazy. It 100% should be a male inlet. I would now question anything that ‘electrician’ is doing…. It must be changed to a male inlet.

Reply
  • You are not going crazy. It 100% should be a male inlet. I would now question anything that ‘electrician’ is doing…. It must be changed to a male inlet.

Children
  • Thank you Alex. It seemed obvious but sometimes I question my sanity when faced with things like this. Because under this setup, the generator cable becomes what I think the Americans refer to as a Jesus Lead (male plug at both ends)

    No wholesaler keeps the male inlets in stock, so I've told him to complete the job and sign it off (that's his problem, not mine) and I'll switch the female to a male myself when Screwfix delivers the part tomorrow. Got the same brand, MK, so conduit etc should all line up.

    He's a nice chap and has helped me out a lot with awkward problems in a flat I rent out so I pretty much can't be bothered to make a fuss when I can fix this. I just found it a bit depressing...

    Side question:

    He added a TT rod (our supply is TN-C-S) but wasn't going to connect that to the MET by default - just to the generator inlet.
    That seemed odd and he's going to connect it now after I asked if there was any reason why not?

    This is kinda why I booked a registered sparky as multiple earthing systems is beyond my thorough understanding, but I thought I'd read somewhere that the supplier's earth should not be relied on in the event of a power failure?

    Is there a standard answer to that?

    Cheers again - Tim