UL does not dictate design. The design of anything is up to the manufactures and their engineers.
UL tests and LISTS item. UL does not APPROVE anything. Look closely at the next ul tag - it will say UL LISTED.
UL reviews the documents provided, the samples provided and any other thihng the manufacture will provide. The listing is just a listing that means the "item" does what is says it does, is made to a certain standard for that item, and operates the way the engineers say it does.
Anybody remember those 2 wire brown household extension cords that evryone overloads? They are UL Listed

********.UL does not dictate design.
And they also come with a sticker explaining exactly how you're supposed to use them WITHOUT overloading them. If you choose to ignore the sticker that's up to you. Without that sticker UL would never approve them.Anybody remember those 2 wire brown household extension cords that evryone overloads? They are UL Listed
So was I. Any 3 prong factory molded plug you find attached to a 12 or 10 gauge cord will be perfectly safe and fine @ 20 amps. There is NO physical difference in the conducting quality of the peices in an L-15 and L-20, either outlet or plug.I was talking about the plug on the end of the cord when I was talking about the plug not being rated for more than 15A.
So was I. Any 3 prong factory molded plug you find attached to a 12 or 10 gauge cord will be perfectly safe and fine @ 20 amps. There is NO physical difference in the conducting quality of the peices in an L-15 and L-20, either outlet or plug.
Yes and yes.You sure the insulation around those metal prongs can withstand the additional heat generated from the extra 5A? Did you test it?
It doesn't matter who. They all say the same thing and have the same requirements in testing. NEMA and NEC can set the requirements, UL does the testing.You seem to be blaming UL for this when (according to a google search) the plug requirements are determined by NEMA and the NEC.
Show me a toaster with a three prong outlet.
ALL of us, regardless of our stupidity level, are treated as sheep that don't know any better.Okay. So what's the issue again?
okay gotcha. I agree with you there. But remember there the majority of people don't understand electricity as well as you do. Also. There are many people who live close enough to others that a poor decision by an ignorant neighbor could negatively effect them. The whole plug system is there for the lowest common denominator.They're all there to protect you from yourself. Like I posted earlier, some people need that, some don't....
I do disagree with that statement. I can walk into home depot and pick up the hardware to build my own cordset and use it how I see fit. Some people are sheep because they have other things they would rather occupy their time with.ALL of us, regardless of our stupidity level, are treated as sheep that don't know any better.
I totally agree, and I do that kind of thing all the time! But it's not always 'legal', or in accordance with how the parts were UL approved. That doesn't make it unsafe though, if nobody broke the rules, then we'd never invent anything new!I can walk into home depot and pick up the hardware to build my own cordset and use it how I see fit.

Yeah, but I can tell you my HF welder didn't comply. The voltage drop through the 14ga cord was terrible and it literally wouldn't work in a dedicated 20A outlet.Isn't there a special section of the nec that deals with circuits for welders? I know I've seen it before but I've never really read through it. My little Lincoln plugs into a 15a outlet.