No. NZ electrical plugs have the two live pins at an angle to each other, rather like an arrow but separated, and the earth pin being vertical.
no
The outlets in your home provide the convenience to be able to use electricity at specific points in rooms throughout the house. This saves not have to take your equipment to the distribution point where the power enters the building to operate the equipment.
No they do not have electrical outlets
Electrical outlets are wired in parallel.
Seems to me that would be a tool for the residents. A diagram of the home that shows electrical outlets and direct wired appliances - and which breaker or fuse these point to.
Yes, electrical outlets can go under windows.
The collective noun for retail outlets is a chain of outlets. The collective noun for electrical outlets is a bank of outlets.
When electrical outlets get old they tend to chip and crack. Also in older outlets the socket gets loose and the plug will not stay in the outlet.
The electrical plan is more of a tool in architectural design than interior design, where the architect in a residential design will place switches, outlets, and light fixtures into the floor plan. An interior designer could then use this information to figure out key issues such as which switches affect each light, and where to place electrical components in the design such as electronics. Also the placement of 220 Volt Outlets directly affect the placement of objects such as washer/dryer and electric appliances in the kitchen. In short, the framework of the electrical plan dictates the placement of devices, fixtures, and appliances throughout the architectural plan.
copper
AC, alternating current is used to power electrical outlets in the U.S..
The average Canadian house uses 110-120V AC 50-60Hz electricity for small appliance outlets such as Televisions, small kitchen appliances and personal computers. Larger electrical appliances such as clothes dryers, and central Air Conditioning units may use 240V AC 50-60Hz circuits.