Every Electrician Needs One Of These: Cliff Quicktest

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  • Опубликовано: 15 май 2024
  • The original screw-less connector. The Cliff Quicktest is a great addition to any electrical test bench for testing equipment that doesn't have a plug fitted.
    =AD= Check price and availability
    hub.efixx.co.uk/Cliff-Quick-Test
    ===========================
    🕐 TIME STAMPS 🕕
    00:00 Have you ever used one of these?
    00:34 Why the Quick Test exists
    01:25 Why didn't they just attach a plug?
    01:55 The original screwless connector
    02:10 We use the Quick test all the time
    02:38 Quick Test specifications
    02:54 Good news for US and Canadian viewers
    03:07 It's useful to fix it to the bench
    03:22 A 3-phase version 👀
    03:33 Where can you buy it?
    04:09 The Quick Test is essential
    ===========================
    #quicktest #electricaltesting #electricalinstallation
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Комментарии • 66

  • @efixx
    @efixx  17 дней назад +1

    =AD= Check price and availability
    hub.efixx.co.uk/Cliff-Quick-Test

  • @G1ZQCArtwork
    @G1ZQCArtwork 17 дней назад +6

    I was given a Cliff Quick test about 50 years ago, I still use it. I found a variant at an Amateur Radio rally a few years ago, so now I have two.

  • @Tinadrives
    @Tinadrives 17 дней назад +6

    In the UK in the 1960s a very similar thing was called a Safe Block. All Service Departments had them.

  • @dougle03
    @dougle03 16 дней назад +1

    I think we can all thank Big Clive for making the Cliff quicktest part of everyday RUclips electrical viewing... Although I do rather like his 'cheapy chinese' death tester that he uses now... Living on the edge...

  • @Rivenworld
    @Rivenworld 17 дней назад +1

    Ha, I used to use these where I worked over 40 years ago, never thought I would never see one again.

  • @brianwood5220
    @brianwood5220 17 дней назад

    Had one for years, they're very handy.

  • @colinritchie1510
    @colinritchie1510 15 дней назад

    Had one of these for years, and very useful. If you have a 13A plug supplying it then you can test appliances with no plug. However, I also have a flex with Wagos at one end, and bare wires at the other. Pit the bare wires into the quicktest and connect heaters or other hard-wired items to the Wagos after disconnecting the item from the FCU. The 13A plug them goes into your portable appliance tester for ISITEE. Thus, it works both ways, a power supply for items with no plug, and a tester for ISITEE.

  • @peewee3ie
    @peewee3ie 16 дней назад

    I picked one at a car boot sales about 20 years ago for about 1 punt (Irish pound) and use it a good bit as I do some electronic repairs and it handy when fixing old electronic items when they don't have a plug.

  • @waynio67
    @waynio67 17 дней назад +1

    Still got my dads quick test from the 60’s still going strong,

  • @chris_burnett
    @chris_burnett 16 дней назад

    Trip down memory lane. I was using these safe blocks 30 years ago for powering up on a test bench.

  • @guffermeister
    @guffermeister 17 дней назад

    These are great for testing kit, altough since pre-wired plugs have been UK law (and I had to look this up is 1992!) they are not quite as often used as I would have done. Are still handy things even if the genuine ones are not cheap.

  • @Bigballs72
    @Bigballs72 17 дней назад +2

    Used one for decades.. Its a exciting bit of kit..

  • @Savagetechie
    @Savagetechie 17 дней назад +1

    Just checked the current pricing! My last one was only £25. I had 2 attached to the front of my workbench they come in especially hand when testing PSUs, ballasts etc when you've pulled them from the appliance under repair.

  • @arcadia1701e
    @arcadia1701e 16 дней назад +1

    Got one years ago after seeing big Clive with it. Its been very usefull.

  • @russellslater4037
    @russellslater4037 16 дней назад

    I love mine for being able to live test items before I've completed the job. By using this, rather than fitting a plug during the repair/test phase, it prevents some numpty plugging in an item that is not yet safe for general use.

  • @davewood4604
    @davewood4604 16 дней назад

    Yay I already have one, in about 30 years I must have used it at least once

  • @TigerP1
    @TigerP1 17 дней назад +1

    My dad got me one in my teens in the 70's but I moved in to IT rather than 'tricity. I Think I still have it somewhere.

  • @Electronics-Rocks
    @Electronics-Rocks 17 дней назад

    I have had my unit i purchased in the 80's how many people still using reliable safe test equipment over 35 years( yes hand tools)!
    It is worth the £45 as rugged & safe.
    Most people here are just in wiring premises so understand your lack of requirements.
    I have both single & 3 phase as great to check rotation before hard wired!

  • @anenglishmaninbrazil3212
    @anenglishmaninbrazil3212 17 дней назад +2

    I have had mine for years and brought it to Brazil, they are supposed to use Black for Line And Blue for Neutral in reality they use any damn colour they have so they dont have to buy more, 99% of standard houses do not have CPC even if its at the meter because of the cost of running more cable. They don't even earth the death showers.

  • @gavinspiby8304
    @gavinspiby8304 17 дней назад +2

    Used these years decades ago 😃
    The 3 phase one looks Hmmm 🤔 😃

  • @skanti-sp2qz
    @skanti-sp2qz 17 дней назад +2

    In the TV trade it was called a SAFEBLOCK.

  • @CoolAEW
    @CoolAEW 16 дней назад +1

    Had one on my wishlist for ages now, but It's so expensive..

  • @robertsmall1715
    @robertsmall1715 17 дней назад +2

    Been using them for decades.

  • @markkennard861
    @markkennard861 12 дней назад

    First time I ever saw one of these was about 30 seconds ago... :) NZ sparky for 40 years.

  • @RaithUK
    @RaithUK 17 дней назад +1

    I seen these years ago as BigClive uses them often on his channel.

  • @joopterwijn
    @joopterwijn 17 дней назад

    They are great, but be careful with the brass connection inside (where you connect your main lead). I ‘screwed’ one up by over tidying the screw. It better to hold the base with a needle-nose-pliers and then tighten the top screw to hold you lead wire. The first one I used the bottom T-screw that holds the jack in place and connect to internal brass connector strips out!

  • @xlfive
    @xlfive 17 дней назад +1

    Still have and still use my safeblock I was issued as and apprentice back in 1976 ,also have another type which is called a Loblite test adapter does anyone still have one of these

  • @anthonybragg
    @anthonybragg 17 дней назад +2

    Didn't think they had stopped being made.

  • @calmeilles
    @calmeilles 16 дней назад

    1970s comprehensive school physics lab, every second 13 Amp double socket had one of these screwed to the bench and hard wired into the supply, I suppose to prevent nickage.

  • @raychambers3646
    @raychambers3646 17 дней назад +1

    Had one for about 40 yrs .

  • @aarocka11
    @aarocka11 17 дней назад

    Big Clive enjoyers have known about this for years.

  • @stunimbus1543
    @stunimbus1543 17 дней назад +1

    1:38 round pin lighting plugs and sockets are still available.

    • @Electronics-Rocks
      @Electronics-Rocks 17 дней назад +1

      Yep still use them in lighting especially theatres

  • @steviejc666
    @steviejc666 17 дней назад

    bloody hell i used to have the same case as gary about 25 years agoish

  • @tomstephenson8579
    @tomstephenson8579 17 дней назад

    I have one from early 60 , still in use and not a mark on it

  • @erwinabelmann
    @erwinabelmann 7 дней назад

    Thank god thats England is an Island 🙏

  • @JayG2K
    @JayG2K 17 дней назад

    coincidentally just bought one 4 days ag on on ebay. someone was selling so i put in a offer. otherwise too expensive at nearly £50!+

  • @assandibba8284
    @assandibba8284 17 дней назад

    I have used it for years

  • @gordonp6353
    @gordonp6353 17 дней назад

    Back in the days of appliances not having moulding on plugs I worked in a service dept, customers would bring in items for repair with the plug removed this was A: So we didn't pinch it. B: To say we had pinched it because it was defiantly on there and we have to replace it or C: Because more than one appliance was wired into one plug. These Quicktest were never any good unless we striped the cable back to have enough wire to reach the clip terminals inside it. Lets just say we had other ways of connecting the wire to an AC outlet. . . .

  • @rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr0
    @rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr0 3 дня назад

    So what does it do?

  • @ZadiesLIVE
    @ZadiesLIVE 17 дней назад

    eFIXX, Subscribed because your videos are so much fun!

    • @efixx
      @efixx  17 дней назад

      Welcome aboard!

  • @FirstDan2000
    @FirstDan2000 17 дней назад

    I was surprised that fitting a plug was ever on the school curriclium.
    I left school in 89 and that wasn't taught to me.
    I think it should still be taught.

    • @r.h.8754
      @r.h.8754 17 дней назад +1

      I was taught how to wire a plug at school in 1969 or 1970, when I was 9 or 10.
      In 2018 my (ex) employer took on somebody aged about 35, they had absolutely no idea how to wire a plug which, as we were field service techs., was a bit worrying!

  • @b00130629
    @b00130629 17 дней назад

    Fit a rcd plug on the other end 😉

  • @garypautard1069
    @garypautard1069 17 дней назад

    I think most electricians would join me in holding up our hands in horror at the electrical bodge-ups made by DIY/home owners . I have seen power points wired in Christmas Tree flex , wire ends twisted together and wrapped in parcel tape and cables fitted diagonally across a wall and covered in filler.

    • @EdwardBretherton
      @EdwardBretherton 14 дней назад

      Don't forget the favourite choc blocks plastered into walls, come across this alot .

  • @r.h.8754
    @r.h.8754 17 дней назад +1

    Shows there is nothing new in the world...wish I could remember what happened to my Safeblock!🤣

  • @Xavier-qm3jc
    @Xavier-qm3jc 16 дней назад

    As seen on Bigclive

  • @tjwatts100
    @tjwatts100 15 дней назад

    That's been around since at least the 70s.

  • @jpptubie
    @jpptubie 16 дней назад

    I’ve had a Safe Block for years. They are nothing new.

  • @UnimportantAcc
    @UnimportantAcc 17 дней назад +1

    Essential? The wagos do fine...

  • @MyProjectBoxChannel
    @MyProjectBoxChannel 14 дней назад

    I have modified mine so that the neon indicates if the fuse inside has blown. The neon now only comes one when the lid is closed, and indicates that the terminals have output power on them. I don't know why they didn't make them like that in the first place🤔. ruclips.net/video/bTrUGDkoDGg/видео.html

  • @keithg1xfl
    @keithg1xfl 17 дней назад

    I've had one for at Least 40 year's, Dont think it's called a quicktest Though

  • @eddiereed5025
    @eddiereed5025 17 дней назад +8

    vastly overpriced

    • @alanrobinson847
      @alanrobinson847 17 дней назад +1

      Agreed, I've always wanted one for bench testing but not paying that

  • @eddiereed5025
    @eddiereed5025 17 дней назад +3

    Vastly overpriced

  • @lewiswarren8209
    @lewiswarren8209 17 дней назад

    Another product placement video...

  • @AAaa-wu3el
    @AAaa-wu3el 17 дней назад

    That "quick-test" is not safe to use. You risk an electric shock when open it with wires connected because you can't see under lip you use to open it. And exactly under that lip bare wire is waiting for your finger.
    Design of this thing should be changed before it can go to the public use.

    • @Tekwyzard
      @Tekwyzard 17 дней назад

      It's perfectly safe if used when all your brain cells are reasonably well engaged. If the cover is lifted even a small amount, both phase and neutral are disconnected, it has a built in 13Amp fuse, and the wires, if inserted properly, with just enough bare copper versus too much, are perfectly well shielded from even the skinniest pinky finger. The thing is as safe as it could possibly be, it's even quite difficult to just pull the wires out, as the clamping force is surprisingly large, so yeah, even members of the public have been using the things already, for literally decades, with afaik no reported incidents.

    • @johnwarwick4105
      @johnwarwick4105 17 дней назад +1

      Yer that's why they were called "safe blocks" suggest you actually have a at one

    • @AAaa-wu3el
      @AAaa-wu3el 16 дней назад

      @@Tekwyzard It's safe when top lid is lifted or closed. But to open this "safe block" you must use the lip in front of device. You put your finger under the lip and lift the top cover. You put your finger exactly to the place where all cables come out, usually with single isolation at best. No, this device is not safe to use, it has a design flaw that must be addressed before it go to sale.

    • @Tekwyzard
      @Tekwyzard 16 дней назад

      @@AAaa-wu3el Why 'must I use the lip in front of the device' to open it? Go on, why? It's got a huge chonkin lid that I can grab anywhere, even with clumsy fingers were my finger to actually be clumsy. It's easy to open, very easy, almost buttery smooth in fact. So what are you on about? I've had one of these for decades, so I know what I'm on about, do you have one? Have you ever had hands on one to try it? If not, you haven't a clue. You do have valid comment re. the single insulation, but that's where the brain cells come in handy, i.e. don't be an idiot with barely tamed electrons, and yes, that respect comes from having had a few interesting shocks in my time.

    • @AAaa-wu3el
      @AAaa-wu3el 16 дней назад

      @@Tekwyzard No, you can not open this device just by pulling up the top lid - you will lift whole thing instead of opening it. Your "battery smooth" contacts must be more tight to achieve good contact, by the way. And if you electrician, you definitely won't use both hands to operate such a device.
      So, to open it you must use one hand, put your fingers under the front lip without seeing what's underneath it - exactly the place where bare ends of cable could be. It's unsafe. it's a design flaw of that "safe block".

  • @blow0me
    @blow0me 17 дней назад +2

    Poor design, needs a more easily changed fuse, and fuse holders for spares. As for teachers in school showing how to connect a plug...one of mine tried to teach. His method was utterly ridiculous and he should never be teaching others it