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![]() "Jeff" wrote in message . com... " When working with a Faraday cage, remember that safety is of the utmost importance. Any mains voltage electrical supply fed into the cage must come in via an isolating transformer so that the mains voltages are floating. This will reduce the risk of electric shock if a chassis becomes live with respect to the earthed cage. It should not be possible to reach any 'ordinary' mains powered sockets, switches or devices outside the cage area when you are within the cage. No external mains earth should be brought into the cage area. The Faraday cage should be provided with its own completely separate electrical earth. Mains sockets within the cage area should not contain an earth connection. That is certainly not the way any screened room I have worked is has been wired, and sounds extremely dangerous. Not having the earths connected inside the room is potentially lethal should a case go live.This is a particular problem with a lot of test equipment where the input filtering causes the case to float to 1/2 mains voltage without an earth. An RCD will not protect you in this situation because of the isolating transformer. Imaging the situation where you are conducting emc tests with the UUT on an earthed copper sheet but all the test equipment is floating at 120V!! It is also a common requirement to have test equipment outside the screened room but connected to equipment inside, isolating transformers and the lack of mains earth would complicate this set up immensely. All the installations that I have seen have not used isolating transformers, just filtering on the incoming mains with a mains earth connection. Protection being provided by an RCD on the mains input. Jeff Jeff If you are working surrounded on all sides by earth potential and you touch a mains live wire, then the current has a path through you to earth. In theory, only the phase (or live) wire represents a serious hazard but in the event of a chassis going live, this could be fatal. By having mains voltages floating, earthing either side of the isolated mains accidently to earth should not result in a lethal shock as the potential on the touched wire only will move down to earth. An RCD is not needed because although one side of the mains has become earthed through you, there should be no return path unless you are touching the other mains wire somehow, in which case you would get a shock whether you were in contact with earth or not! 110v Isolating transformers with their central point earthed are used on all building sites in the UK to limit shock voltages to 55v AC. In this case the transformer is earthed because it is impossible to work away from other natural earth points, girders, trusses, rods, etc. To a large extent this also prevents the risk of inappropriate equipment designed only for domestic purposes being used on site. For a Faraday cage installation, the mains supply should be completely isolated and floating using a double insulated approved transformer, no autotransformers. I previously worked in a test environment where isolating transformers and a rubber mat were regarded as adequate protection against shock. Times change. A proper Faraday cage setup does represent quite a complex environment to design, is potentially (sorry) very dangererous to work in and so it is worth looking at the official documents available for their recommendations. In the UK at least, the standards are recommendations rather than statutory requirements although you will have a tough time in court if someone is injured or killed as a result of non-compliance. Before attempting to set up this sort of testing room, consider carefully what your requirements are, the safety implications and design accordingly. Sticking a load of earthed foil and mesh around the inside of a shed is only the start. Better safe than crispy fried critter. Mike G0ULI |
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