I have vertical power switches throughout my 1970s house. Do you like vertical power switches? I find them a hinderance. If you have done a new build, do you have vertical or horizontal power switches?
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Vertical are a pain with current charging bricks for portable devices. Unfortunately that's what we have in our house.
I cant handle a vertical light switch with a horizontal power socket underneath it. There's too much chaos in the world as it is.
Most of the posters in this thread are just like chimpanzees on MDMA, full of feelings of bonhomie, joy, and optimism. Fred99 8/4/21
Most of mine are vertical. The problem with horizontal I have found is that powerbricks can sometimes be slightly too wide, so you can't get two bricks in . The Alexa brick is especially wide. I use multiboards with surge protection with most outlets anyway.
elpenguino:
I cant handle a vertical light switch with a horizontal power socket underneath it. There's too much chaos in the world as it is.
Agree and that is why most of ours are vertical except on kitchen benchtops and network cabinet.
If you are doing a new build, just put some thought into the kitchen bench and unde bench.
you get the idea !
Handle9: Horizontal outlets. Vertical light switches. End of story.
Depends on where they are.
Horizontal in the kitchen as that orientation looks better in the long rectangular splash back gap between the bench and wall cupboards, in my opinion.
Vertical in the living room where in a lot of places you can see the power sockets at low level beneath the light switches.
We've got a bit of a random mixture in our house which is a bit annoying when they swap about in the same room, as is the fact that they aren't consistent in style/supplier and don't match each other or the light switches which also vary in style from room to room.🙄
Either way, powerbricks/wall warts are a problem. Pretty much guaranteed to come across ones that are either too wide or too high (or both) to prevent you using both sockets at the same time and probably obscures the on/off switches as well regardless of which way the sockets are orientated.
The standard wall plate is just slightly too small for two sockets in that regard.
angski:
I have vertical power switches throughout my 1970s house. Do you like vertical power switches? I find them a hinderance. If you have done a new build, do you have vertical or horizontal power switches?
Horizontal for power points, vertical or grid for light switches. Why? I don't know, probably just because I am a trapped conformist.
Our house mostly has vertical ones that arn't even dueplex if they havn't been replaced since the 1970s. Where as the rest are vertical dueplex. Allthough I know there is atleast one horziontal one that has 2 sockets allthough it is the same normal height so it has a massive wallplate and I'm not sure what we would put in its place when we switch the outlets out (can you get 2 vertical ones next to eachover on the same wall plate in a 2x2 conficutation)
In general horziontal seems to be the more ideal confiugration allthough most of the outless in our house have a mulitbox pluged into them.
Shaddow798:Allthough I know there is atleast one horziontal one that has 2 sockets allthough it is the same normal height so it has a massive wallplate and I'm not sure what we would put in its place when we switch the outlets out (can you get 2 vertical ones next to eachover on the same wall plate in a 2x2 conficutation)
mdf:Handle9: Horizontal outlets. Vertical light switches. End of story.
We're currently renovating the downstairs of our place. Shifted to this approach (previously everything was vertical) and very happy with it.
Did this at the Casa de Cowboy as well, everything vertical that could be replaced was replaced with horizontal. And put in four-way outlets in locations where things other than say a vacuum cleaner get plugged in (meaning most of them), because you'll need them.
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