So I am aware of the improper romex in this pic but my question is about this face plate with the two pins normally seen on TV's, and other appliances for 'cheater cords' for inputting power to them but how were they used in these face plates?
This was a 300 ohm TV antenna connection. Supposedly a divider or no box at all in that area.So I am aware of the improper romex in this pic but my question is about this face plate with the two pins normally seen on TV's, and other appliances for 'cheater cords' for inputting power to them but how were they used in these face plates?
This was a 300 ohm TV antenna connection. Supposedly a divider or no box at all in that area.
This was a 300 ohm TV antenna connection. Supposedly a divider or no box at all in that area.
Whats going on with the NM raceway under the receptacle?
My guess is a funky NM tap to the receptacle with wire mold or such, dipped into the drywall.
My guess is a handyman addition of another outlet without going back through the wall.
This was a 300 ohm TV antenna connection. Supposedly a divider or no box at all in that area.
I would not be surprised if it was opened up and you found a low amp 12v transformer in there... since it is keyed...
Two or three pins would be antenna. The old rotor receptacle would be a separate five pin connection, with power supplied by the control box, but sockets used on the wall plate nevertheless.With pins, even recessed, if it is a power coupling it's an inlet, not outlet. It doesn't fit any IEC 60320 pattern, as none had a single notch/bump.
This is what I recall as an antenna/rotor outlet:
View attachment 20993
Likely that is what it was but in all my years in the business I never saw one like that. Why the notch to maintain polarity?
Any ones I saw were female- just two holes in a wall plate to receive the round pins of the twin-lead plug.
Wondering if it might be a speaker connection or for some other LV device.
-Hal
Two or three pins would be antenna. The old rotor receptacle would be a separate five pin connection, with power supplied by the control box, but sockets used on the wall plate nevertheless.
One of the nice things about standards is that there are so many different ones to choose from.... JBL marked the polarity of their speakers in reverse from everyone else. If you did the 9V battery thump test, JBL speakers would jump the opposite direction from anyone else's. Why would they do that?