Then I have a wall socket (**broken link removed**) where I wired L, N and E accordingly as well.
What I did was I pluged in my plug into the wall socket to test for connectivity.
The E wire of my plug is successfully connected to the E wire of the wall socket.
The N wire of my plug is successfully connected to the N wire of the wall socket.
When I tested the L wire of the plug with the L wire of the socket, there does not seem to be any connectivity.
Is my socket faulty, or am I missing out on some information on sockets?
Faulty multimeter.... reminds me 30 years ago when I was up a ladder, to rewire a 3 phase junction box. I tested each of the phases to see if they were dead, and all I'd saw on the test meter was a very slight movement on the meter needle, not even a volt. OK I thought.
So I went down the ladder and placed the meter on the bench and then returned back to the top of the ladder, carried out the wiring, which was replacing a fuse holder, and completed the job.
Then when I got down the ladder back on the ground and looked at the meter on the bench I was so 'shocked' that I nearly fell over. It was set to DC VOLTS, not AC. So I went up to the top of the ladder again, with the meter set to AC this time, and read 240 volts on each phase. I had done the rewiring with the box live and didn't know it because I thought the meter was saying the circuit is dead. I learned something that day I would never forget!
Moral: I'm personally responsible for making sure the meter works properly!