Please note that the switch I am mentioning above is the switch on the power strip. Not the switch switching the power outlet itself.
Yes, that's the one I'm referring to as well.
I was wondering like why should both line and neutral output some voltage when the power strip switch is switched off. For example,
I measured the voltage between the terminals and found their values to be this when the switch is OFF.
1. Line to neutral - 1v
2. Line(neutral) to earth - 200v
3. neutral(line) to earth - 80v
200V will probably be the full mains voltage. That pin is live and dangerous (due to a combination of your backwards wiring and the single-pole switch).
80V will probably be a phantom or "high impedance" voltage. You will only see this when measuring using a high-impedance tool (like a multimeter in volts mode). If you plug in an appliance to the powerstrip (like I suggest) then it should instantly disappear. Technically also if an earthed human touched the wire (
don't do this! I may be wrong!) it would also disappear to below 10VAC or so.
Switches do not perfectly ever turns things off or on, they have limits:
- In the ON position: the switch is a small resistive load (milliohms).
- In the OFF position: the switch is a very high resistive load (likely dozens of megaohms or more) with some capacitance in parallel (perhaps a few dozen pF or so).
Additionally any insulation that separates the live and neutral wires also acts as a small capacitor.
A little bit of current leaks through this capacitance when the switch is OFF. When you use a high-impedance measurement tool (like volts mode on most multimeters) then you end up with a circuit like this:
240VAC mains -- unintended capacitances (~100pf) -- multimeter (~10Mohm resistive impedance) -- 240VAC mains
With these approximate numbers: you would read about 50VAC on the multimeter.