Someone please help me buy a european power adapter

Still, that’s quite a premium. They’re usually $1-$2.

If your laptop (or anything else) is grounded that’s one more thing to think about. I don’t know why but I’ve seen some laptops that were.

In your case a cheap adapter will suffice, but you can also get replacement for the part of the laptop cord that goes between the brick and the wall to fit whatever outlet you need to plug it in. More work and more expensive but neater.

Thanks for the help guys. I read the posts after my previous one and it cleared things up for me. I guess all I really needed was to see a picture like what Bear_Nenno linked to. I went ahead and ordered the one linked to by Mr Downtown.

This page might be helpful.

Danish sockets (type K) are by far the cutest. :slight_smile:

I have one of these:

http://www.amazon.com/Dynex-Travel-Adapter-Plug/dp/B004GTR8LA/ref=sr_1_27?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1358208857&sr=1-27&keywords=travel+power+adapter

which is materially the same as the one you bought, and in 3 European trips to 6 countries, it’s never failed to work like a charm.

You don’t need the transformers for most consumer electronics anymore- most cell phone chargers, laptops and camera battery chargers all handle 240v without an issue.

For some reason, the plug adapters I’ve seen usually have a “won’t work in South Africa” blurb. What’s with South African plugs that makes them so exclusive?

this. irons and hair dryers usually need transformers, that’s it.

Not to mention that plenty of cell phones can be charged with a USB cable to your computer.

Because most of their sockets are Type M, which almost nobody else uses.

I checked the British web site of the Swedish company Clas Ohlsson, that sells more or less anything plus some more at low prices. All their adapters cost around 3-5 pounds.

If it hasn’t been suggested, try searching or looking for a transformer instead of adapter.
http://www.maplin.co.uk/300w-uk-to-usa-voltage-convertor-265288
They should sell the UK to USA version as well.

What you don’t want is something cheap like this http://www.maplin.co.uk/45w-uk-to-usa-voltage-convertor-19413
You will most likely fry or damage your device.

Actually it has been explained why that is not necessary, and why, for the laptop the OP is concerned with, a simple plug adapter is sufficient.

Which is still triple or more that you’d pay buying something online in advance. 3-5 pounds for something that is just a simple piece of plastic and some cheap metal seems expensive to me. Here’s one for 67 cents.

Well that one won’t work in Britain; but I agree that £3-5 sounds high.

This set should work, I think, for $2.50.

Hair driers don’t - and they suck up lots of current. When you are going someplace to live you need a wider range of adapters.
My Samsung smartphone charger actually says “travel adapter” on it, btw.

I know about hair driers, but I don’t consider them “electronics” (although I suppose some may be smart enough to have electronic components in them), and hence my examples including only household electronics, and to check the voltage input anyway, just in case. I’ve been traveling internationally regularly for about 15 years, and the only electronics that I ever remember needing a voltage convertor is a Korg keyboard synthesizer that was manufactured in 1988.

Always check to be sure, but most electronics, in my experience, have not needed convertors for at least a decade. I don’t even bother to check anymore, I just assume they’re dual voltage.

In that instance, you would probably do a lot better to jut buy a new hairdryer when you get there. (Although actually I have found that some hairdryers have dual voltage operation built in, with a little switch.)

You probably should. There are definitely cheapo electronic things that do not come with dual voltage power supplies. For instance, I recently found my USB hub power supply and my cheap amplifier/speakers (for an MP3 player) that were bought in America will not operate on British power, without a new power supply (which probably would be about as expensive as whole new items, in these cases). However, for fancier things, like laptops, I think you are right.

That makes sense. I wasn’t thinking about those cheapie kinds of things, just the standard modern electronics the average person travels with (phones, computers, MP3 players, battery rechargers.) But I do say “always check to be sure.” In the vast majority of cases when it comes to modern electronics you’re likely to travel with, the power supply they come with is dual voltage. I don’t even own a voltage convertor, and I go abroad with some regularity (right now, in fact.)

It will work fine in Britain using the method I described earlier.