The hood above the hob had fallen off. The plugs stripped the wall. Made the holes bigger and used better plugs. Also put in some construction glue into the holes for good measure.
The hood above the hob had fallen off. The plugs stripped the wall. Made the holes bigger and used better plugs. Also put in some construction glue into the holes for good measure.
Is that powerstrip to code with the cord passing through a wall/ceiling like that?
Or against the metal tube that ventilates smoke
And vibrates. Oof, that’s not good.
In Europe ground fault interruption is mandatory, as well as breakers that trip at a relatively low current at a fast speed. All of the wires are also at least double insulated with heat resistant plastic. The appliance is more likely to get replaced due to old age rather than the wire wearing through. And even if it does, the ground fault interruptor kicks in right away and prevents anything bad from happening. The owner investigates, buys a new cord for a few euro and easily replaces it.
If that tube gets 5 degrees warmer than the room I’d be surprised.
I don’t think he is cooking with wood.
I don’t think i know of any appliances with plenum rated cords but I could be wrong.
That seems to be just a board, not a ceiling. There’s probably a plug on the other side of the cable going into an outlet, so technically it isn’t part of the wiring. I do wonder why you’d need five plugs plugged in at that location though.
If you have to ask……
Looks more like it’s passed into a cupboard, probably an outlet in the soffit for lighting.