Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ron wrote:
OK that is one case where your need two failures to cause a hot chassis. Now for Doofus to get electrocuted he will also have to have one hand on this deaf radio and one hand on the radio that has a metal chassis that is plugged into a socket with a good ground. He won't know the radio is "deaf" until he trys to turn it on... and you know Doofus, he broke the on/off knob years ago, and he always turns the bare aluminum shaft while he is standing barefoot on the cement floor. The problem you could also have a similar problem even if the neutral was wired correctly (not tied to ground). If the ground wire broke in the cord or inside the radio and then a capacitor or a transformer had an internal short to the chassis or there was a resistor from hot to chassis ground then the chassis would become hot. The so called safety ground is not a 100% sure thing in the case of a failure. Nothing is ever 100% perfectly safe. But you do try and improve the odds as much as you can comfortably afford. Adding a safety wire system gives you much more bang for the buck in terms of safety than the simple addition of 33% more wire would appear to offer. Because safety grounds are as prone to fail as anything a third external wire tying all metal cabinet radios together is the only safety measure if one has a table full of these old AC powered beasts. Yes it is not a good policy to tie the ground and neutral together. I just felt that a good explanation of why not to do so was required instead of just a blanket statement stating "The safety ground must NEVER be connected to the neutral at the load !NEVER! " The problem here is I could write for the next week describing all of the failure modes I know about that can and do happen with power distribution grounds, and grounding. But I really don't have that kind of time. It is far easier for me to tell you that doing such a thing is unsafe, and that you should NEVER connect the safety ground to the neutral at the load. If I tell you that E = I * R are you going to make me prove it? Or can I just tell you from a position of assumed authority that this is a true relationship? You can go and find a book that will tell you E = I*R, and likewise, you can find a book, or do a google search, to find out why you should NEVER connect the safety ground to the neutral at the load. -Chuck |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
WTB: RCA Console Chassis | Boatanchors | |||
WTB: RCA Console Chassis | Boatanchors | |||
Help! Transformer induces hum to chassis! | Homebrew | |||
FREE: Gonset GSB-100 chassis - PICKUP PREFERRED | Swap | |||
Steel no good for chassis? (Which metal is best for old regen designs?) | Homebrew |