I'm getting shocked Electricity grounding with 2-prong?

In summary: If you are playing with an amp that is not properly grounded, you may get small shocks. However, it shouldn't be anything big. Just be aware of the dangers and be careful. You also use this amp at your own risk.
  • #106
Averagesupernova said:
I thought this was interesting: http://www.highvoltageconnection.com/articles/ElectricShockQuestions.htm

Also, I tested a GFCI tonight with a 47K resistor. Not enough to trip. Should have passed about 2.5 mA. Allen Mottershead second edition Electricity and Electronics claims it takes about 5 mA to trip a GFCI. Notice that is the same current as stated in the table as maximum allowable safe current. I didn't test the GFCI with a 5 mA load since I don't have a resistor rated at enough wattage. All of the ones I have on hand would smoke. Please don't take this post as saying that 'if it won't trip a GFCI then it must be perfectly safe'.
I wrote the electrical safety portion of a program that my employer (2nd-largest training company in the world) presented to the electrical supervisors of what might have been the world's largest chemical company at the time. It is frightening how little current it can take to kill you under ideal circumstances. People who minimize safety risks ("get used to it", or "the capacitor will only allow XX amps") really get under my skin, because people can die from this stuff, while the nay-sayers go "la-la-la".
 
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  • #107
@Turbo
You seems to be changing your tune a bit here. Are you accepting that there is, in fact, a path for only a very few mA through 'the capacitor' and are you, in fact, accepting that this is the only relevant source of danger? Can we now also eliminate the ideas of "peaks" occurring in antiphase etc. and causing large differences in DC voltage?

No one on this thread is claiming that there is no harm in unearthed and mis-connected equipment. There is universal condemnation of shoddy design and construction but a realistic appraisal of the actual risks involved. I think your crusade for 'improving' this old fashioned gear may actually be a bit of two edged sword - encouraging the preservation of stuff which should be on the dump by now. If they turn up with broken stuff and you mend it for them then they will only put off further the day that they bite the bullet and go out and buy something properly engineered.
 
  • #108
The OP was playing an ungrounded amp and got shocked by a mic. It could just as well have been through contact with another amplifier or another musician whose strings were at a different ground potential. If his chassis is hot and he touches a properly grounded piece of equipment, he becomes the path to ground.

If you want to imply that I am "changing my tune" have at it. If you read my posts you'll see that I was quite consistent, and your misconceptions regarding chassis grounds were likely the cause of your confusion.

As far as my "mending" broken stuff, I have explained quite patiently that I will not repair, tune, or modify any vintage amp unless the owner gives me permission to bring it up to modern code. Or did you miss that too? In older Fender amps, that requires disconnecting the ground switch (if present) and running the hot lead to the fuse-holder, and THEN to the power switch, as well as establishing a proper chassis ground (at supply ground) for the amp.
 
  • #109
If you just disconnected 'that capacitor' there could be no more trouble. Why not just do that? There is nothing to stop someone changing the mains plug wiring as soon as they get it home - you just can't trust them. However much you get their permission to do what you want, you have no control on what goes on subsequently.
You still make statements that are not relevant to the problem. The fuse: Until it actually blows, how does the siting of the fuse alter the shockability of an amp when the mains leads are swapped? Fuses aren't there to protect against shock - they are there to prevent excess current flowing. (No need to explain the reason for putting the fuse in the correct place - I already made that point earlier - it's not relevant here though.)

You have not explained how, if his amp has a mains transformer, he can get a lethal shock, however he connects it to the mains, if the only path is through 'that capacitor'. What do you mean by "hot"? On its own, the value of voltage measured on an object is not relevant. You can touch a Var Der Graaf generator (several 100kV) and get 'a shock' but I know of no examples of people being killed that way. They even let Schools operate them, in these litigious times, with no special safety instructions attached. If he really is getting a shock then I can only suggest that the transformer isolation could be breaking down and I think that a PAT tester or Megger would probably reveal that. Does your upgrading to modern code include testing and replacing possibly faulty transformers? As I said in my last post, the sooner such aged amps are out of circulation the better. If there were evidence that modern amps suffer from the same problem then things might be different. After all, the basic theory doesn't include age in the parameters.

I am not going LA LA on the subject of safety. I am referring to the internationally accepted levels of health risk which have been established by much more extensive testing than your limited examples of anecdotal evidence. Anyway, if you were really that concerned then I can't see that you'd still be keeping these amps operational.
 
  • #110
I'm keeping my mouth shut 'til I have a look at the book. You all (should) know where I stand.
 

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