T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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406.1 | D-7 supply is the same way. | WHICH::YERAZUNIS | | Wed Jul 16 1986 18:30 | 4 |
| Happens on the D-7 too.
(the power leakage, that is)
|
406.2 | Plug them leaks | 15749::ARVIDSON | Dan Arvidson - DTN 247-2437 | Wed Jul 16 1986 18:50 | 5 |
| I found with my D-7 that the leakage was from the receiver. I had the plug for
the receiver backwards and that was leaking from the input to the receiver to
the output from the D-7.
Dan
|
406.3 | Jump-start yer car with Brain Waves! | WHICH::YERAZUNIS | | Thu Jul 17 1986 10:38 | 5 |
| Mine does it with the headphones plugged in. Does my brain generate
12 volts? :-)
Anyone here measured the in-line resistance of the leakage current?
|
406.4 | Insane if this is a design and not a sample defect | SKYLAB::FISHER | Burns Fisher 381-1466, ZKO1-1/D42 | Fri Jul 18 1986 10:33 | 11 |
| What is in that idiotic power pack? An AUTOtransformer? This is
rather ridiculous! Reversing the plug indeed...no side of the power
line should have any measurable conductance to anything a user can
touch! That is the purpose of the external power supply, for heaven
sake!
<Flame off>
Has anyone bitched to Sony about this? I think I may do so. Any
suggestions on where/how?
Burns
|
406.5 | Polarity may be the reason | NRLABS::MACNEAL | Big Mac | Fri Jul 18 1986 10:55 | 13 |
| We had a seminar on electrical safety here in NRO awhile back by a guy
from OSHA (he has appeared on Good Morning America too) on the subject
of the correct way to plug in appliances. Because of the polarity of
AC outlets, if an appliance is plugged in incorrectly, there exists an
electric field (the thing is still live) even though the switch is off.
In other words, don't grab an old metal electric coffee pot and stick
your hand in the sink, or you'll get zapped for sure.
This may also be the cause of the humming experienced in the CD player.
There is a slow movement to ensure that electrical appliances go into
the wall socket only one way, but the appliances that have them are
limited, and the manufacturers really don't seem to want to get
involved.
|
406.6 | is <hmmmmmm> better than KA-POW! ?? | REMEDY::KOPEC | It wasn't me.. Honest! | Fri Jul 18 1986 11:13 | 21 |
| In audio equipment, the leakage current is usually quite low. Before
anybody gets TOO bent out of shape about this, remember that they
still make TV sets with one side of the AC line connected to the
chassis.... but with their polarized plug connected to a
correctly-wired outlet the chassis is connected to neutral.
Audio equipment is usually ungrounded to help avoid ground loops;
however, it's probably a good idea to have a single point in the
system grounded to the power-system ground for safety. When I ground
my tangled mass of audio equipment (turntable, preamp, power amp,
2 CD players, tuner, and equalizer) the total leakage still won't trip
a (recently verified) Ground-fault interrupter. Just for hahas
I'll try and measure it this weekend.
Quote from the Crown PL3 manual: "NOTE: Crown assumes no liability
whatsoever for operation of ungrounded auxiliary equipment, nor
for the violation of UL or electrical codes." They tell you this
right after they explain why they don't have a 3-wire cord on the
unit.
...tek
|
406.7 | I'm going to measure it | SKYLAB::FISHER | Burns Fisher 381-1466, ZKO1-1/D42 | Fri Jul 18 1986 12:19 | 20 |
| re .6: TVs with chassis connected to neutral: Yes, but the chassis
is not supposed to be touchable. I bet that they volume control
pots are not mounted on the chassis to keep the shafts from being
connected on one side of the line. And remember that neutral is
not the same as ground if there is any current flowing through it.
re Ungrounded audio equipment: I agree there too...the problem
is that the CD is NOT ungrounded. It has an unpolarized plug, and
it has some conductivity between the line and some metal that I
can touch. I have not noticed any audio hum...just that tingly
feeling that you feel when you touch something which has leakage.
I am afraid that I will get hum, though, when I connect it to my
amp for just the ground-loop reason that you mentioned. I am also
concerned about the possibility of AC appearing on the audio line
and zapping something. I plan to measure the leakage before I connect
it to anything. I will report back when I do. (I just found my
DMM in a box in the basement after moving!)
Burns
|
406.8 | ain't electricity wonderful? | REMEDY::KOPEC | It wasn't me.. Honest! | Fri Jul 18 1986 13:46 | 12 |
| Hmmm... maybe we're using the term 'grounded' to describe two different
things... by 'grounded' I mean a metallic connection between 'system
ground' and the third prong in the outlet (or the center screw or
whatever). If you have 13 volts from case to the third prong, then
either the case of the player isn't connected to the shields on
the audio cables, or the whole system isn't connected to ground.
I'd be a little suprised (tho not amazed) if the player case wasn't
grounded... much less surprised to find the whole system floating.
If you don't test your household circuit breaker by blowing up your
ammeter shunt when you check the leakage, check to see if the voltage
exists between case and signal ground... If the signal ground is
bouncing at 13VAC, ground the whole system.
|
406.9 | No 3rd prong on D-5 | SKYLAB::FISHER | Burns Fisher 381-1466, ZKO1-1/D42 | Mon Jul 21 1986 14:19 | 12 |
| Problem is, the D-5 does not have a third prong. It has a power
supply with a two-prong plug built in, and a wire leading of to
the D-5 which should be carrying 9VDC completely isolated from the
AC line.
BTW, I uncrated by receiver (Sony STR-2045) and tried plugging the
D-5 into the AUX input port. All worked fine...no hum, no zap.
Despite my earlier statement, I still have not done the measurement.
Maybe I am making a big storm out of nothing.
Burns
|
406.10 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Steve Lionel | Mon Jul 21 1986 15:21 | 5 |
| Re .9:
Maybe you are. I run my D-5 into my receiver all the time (in
fact, I have yet to use it as a portable), and I never have hum
problems.
Steve
|
406.11 | RFI Filter Caps Cause Leakage | GENRAL::LAURENCE | | Mon Jul 21 1986 16:00 | 13 |
| I am supprised that no one has mentioned the source of most ac
leakage in audio equipment.....RFI filter caps. A lot of manufacturers
place a cap between hot and ground where the line cord comes into
the chassis. This is to eliminate higher frequency interference
from getting into the equipment from the line. Depending on the
value of the cap, you can get enough current flowing at 60hz to
cause the type of voltages being quoted. Multiple outlet strips
and protection circuits will also cause this problem. It really
is not a problem as long as you don't have any hum in your system,
if you do, you might try taking these caps out!
Dennis
|
406.12 | don't take out the RFI filters! Please! | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Jul 22 1986 13:56 | 8 |
| ARGGH!! If you remove them, don't blame me or the other amateur
radio operators in the neighborhood if your system starts picking
up signals not intended for it! I have been going around putting
filters INTO equipment all over the neighborhood where the manufacturer
was too cheap to supply it, to keep my neighbors off my back.
At most, replace the caps you don't like with better ones.
Charlotte (KQ1F)
|