[QUOTE 4168025, member: 9609"]spending £8 is never easier. Presumably all the plug in tester does in respect of earth is to check for resistance, so a plug wired up to a choc block and multi meter should do the same job.
seriously though I will get one of these plug in devices, presumably they will also show things with the live neutral swapped (of course my multimetered plug will also do the same) and I have found one case of a live neutral swap, what I don't qute understand why things were working in it, (charges etc)[/QUOTE]
I was thinking of time saving, and not having to turn the power off, or worry about faults to earth or stray currents, so safer.
A long time ago I saw a simpler home-made version in an electronics magazine. Basically it consisted of 3 neon lights connecting the three pins: L to N, N to E, L to E. They were fitted into a plug that had three holes drilled in it for the neon lights.
If all is well, then when plugged in lights LN and LE should light up, but not NE, as N and E should be at the same potential.
If E is open circuit then lights LE and NE are effectively in series between L and N, so will either both come on dimly, or not at all, depending on the lights used.
If L and N are reversed, then LN and NE will light, but not LE. Various other combinations show other faults.