Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Have just been reading on another Thai Visa forum about a safety product to prevent electrical shocks. The lack of such devices on the usual home and commercial buildings has always seemed dangerous to me. Not dangerous like maybe a tree will fall on me but dangerous like one of the bad things about living in Thailand. The article about the product seemed to be saying that the people selling it did the installation onto existing systems. Finding a qualified electrician has been part of why I haven't put in a grounded/earthed system in any of the houses I have rented while living on Samui. Anybody know where this is available locally, or could recommend an electrician with the right skills and Western outlook on this problem? It seems ironic to me that my last rental was owned in part by a Thai electrician but even more surprising that my current one is owned and was built by a European.

Posted

I had my house re-wired just recently and it turned out that whoever had originally fitted the Safe-T Cut box had wired it the wrong way round!

The (Thai) guy I used this time made a neat job of adding extra sockets, outside lights etc and was not expensive.

PM me if you want his number. (He does not speak English so you'll need a Thai to speak to him for you).

Posted

They also sell it in homepro, in case you got someone already to install it. Its also called RCBO.

I had one installed last year, a wise decision, just a few weeks ago I had workers at my house, they have been working outside with electric tools when strong rain started. Suddenly the power at my house went of, cut by the RCBO, one of the workers got a small shock anyhow, but probably the device saved his life.

Posted

I had my house re-wired just recently and it turned out that whoever had originally fitted the Safe-T Cut box had wired it the wrong way round!

The (Thai) guy I used this time made a neat job of adding extra sockets, outside lights etc and was not expensive.

PM me if you want his number. (He does not speak English so you'll need a Thai to speak to him for you).

Post his details on the pinned "traders" page - good to know this info! Thanks.

R

Posted (edited)

I installed a safe t cut recently as well. I was fortunate that my rental house electrics were properly grounded. All I had to do was to replace many of the two pin sockets with 3 pin sockets as the ground wire was already available. I asked a sparky to install a main whatever it is called switch between the incoming power lines and my fuse box. I then installed the safe t cut before the fuse box together with the sparky as he had no idea how it should be done. The safe t cut comes with a schematic so it's not that hard. Just make sure everything is grounded or the device is of little use. I purchased the safe t cut and grounded outlets on the internet. Way cheaper than at home pro. Also home pro only had 1 or 2 models.

I recently had the safe t cut cut of my electric a few times in succession. I unplugged everything, flipped the electric back on and started plugging in devices. I found that my toaster was faulty and the casing was getting power on it. I don't want to know what would have happened to anyone touching the toaster without the safe t cut installed...post-90962-0-44285400-1403598154_thumb.j

Edited by Gulfsailor
  • 4 months later...
Posted

I installed a safe t cut recently as well. I was fortunate that my rental house electrics were properly grounded. All I had to do was to replace many of the two pin sockets with 3 pin sockets as the ground wire was already available. I asked a sparky to install a main whatever it is called switch between the incoming power lines and my fuse box. I then installed the safe t cut before the fuse box together with the sparky as he had no idea how it should be done. The safe t cut comes with a schematic so it's not that hard. Just make sure everything is grounded or the device is of little use. I purchased the safe t cut and grounded outlets on the internet. Way cheaper than at home pro. Also home pro only had 1 or 2 models.

I recently had the safe t cut cut of my electric a few times in succession. I unplugged everything, flipped the electric back on and started plugging in devices. I found that my toaster was faulty and the casing was getting power on it. I don't want to know what would have happened to anyone touching the toaster without the safe t cut installed...post-90962-0-44285400-1403598154_thumb.j

Hello Gulfsailor,

Can you please tell me where you purchased your Safe T Cut from, as the only units I can find are at homepro and they only have the 50A units and I would like the 63A version.

Than you.

Posted

I installed a safe t cut recently as well. I was fortunate that my rental house electrics were properly grounded. All I had to do was to replace many of the two pin sockets with 3 pin sockets as the ground wire was already available. I asked a sparky to install a main whatever it is called switch between the incoming power lines and my fuse box. I then installed the safe t cut before the fuse box together with the sparky as he had no idea how it should be done. The safe t cut comes with a schematic so it's not that hard. Just make sure everything is grounded or the device is of little use. I purchased the safe t cut and grounded outlets on the internet. Way cheaper than at home pro. Also home pro only had 1 or 2 models.

I recently had the safe t cut cut of my electric a few times in succession. I unplugged everything, flipped the electric back on and started plugging in devices. I found that my toaster was faulty and the casing was getting power on it. I don't want to know what would have happened to anyone touching the toaster without the safe t cut installed...post-90962-0-44285400-1403598154_thumb.j

Hello Gulfsailor,

Can you please tell me where you purchased your Safe T Cut from, as the only units I can find are at homepro and they only have the 50A units and I would like the 63A version.

Than you.

ebigthailand.com

model number: PR20-63A

super cheap!

  • 1 year later...
Posted

Finally got a Safe-T-Cut installed, quite happy about it. A former coworker of my wife started his own business in Lipa Noi, and he seems very good at electrical and probably other stuff. Sounds like he is doing more installations than repairs, but still has time for smaller jobs. PM me if you would like his number.

Won my heart when he said, 'I have one in my house. My little child (mimes crawling around and putting a finger in the socket)....'

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.


  • Topics

  • Latest posts...

    1. 0

      Tour Boat Capsizes in Cheow Lan Dam in Storm: Search for Missing French Tourist

    2. 32

      K bank E-mail with Tax Forms attached ?

    3. 20

      Thailand Live Sunday 24 November 2024

    4. 54

      Is this the "Little Surprise" of 47 and the Speaker?

    5. 0

      Surin Man Drives Car with Pedestrian’s Body on Roof for Over 30 Km Before Being Stopped

    6. 0

      Myanmar Worker Rescued After Hand Trapped in Meat Grinder for Two Hours

    7. 0

      4-Year-Old Boy Drowns in Reservoir Construction Site

  • Popular in The Pub


×
×
  • Create New...