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Dave Platt wrote:
The intent of the third prong on the power plug is to provide a safe path from the equipment chassis, back to the power panel (where the neutral and hot are bonded together). This ensures that if there's a fault inside the equipment, and a "hot" wire touches the chassis, the stray current will immediately flow back to the panel via this ground connection (and likely cause a fuse to blow or a breaker to trip very quickly). It ensures that you don't end up with a chassis which is "hot", and isolated from ground... just waiting for somebody to touch it, accidentally complete a path to ground via their body, and get themselves mildly dead. One of the reasons that Ground fault interrupters are around. If you have a hundred feet or even more of neutral wire going back to that panel, you can still get an appreciable current flowing through you without tripping a breaker. I've had my tookus saved by one of those GFCI things when a power tool failed in the manner you just described. I felt the shock for just a fraction of a second, then it tripped. the chassis, or sneak back into the microphone wiring and cause weird squawking sounds when you transmit). Ahh, that happens to me all the time even without RF on the mic! ;^) - 73 de Mike N3LI - |
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