Steve,
Yeah, I know, but Tom seemed a bit concerned about sticking his mitts in
there. I think we are all trying to tell him in various ways that as
long as he is unplugged, nothing bad will happen to him, either from the
a.c. or d.c. sides.
I still have a feeling that on the inside this screw may be the
connection to chassis ground for the a.c. line cord, and he would be
better off getting it tight.
73, Steve KW3A
On 2/28/2011 12:32 PM, Steve Dresser wrote:
> Steve,
>
> Even if there were high voltage on the DC side of the supply, you wouldn't
> get a shock from the AC socket because the DC voltage will never be passed
> back through the power transformer.
>
> Steve
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Steve Forst"<[log in to unmask]>
> To:<[log in to unmask]>
> Sent: Monday, February 28, 2011 09:19
> Subject: Re: RFI Saga continued
>
>
>> Tom,
>>
>> This isn't your amp, where a few thousand volts are floating around.
>> While you should always be careful messing around with this stuff, look
>> at it this way: If you turn off the supply and unplug it from the
>> wall, and your hand brushes against the a.c. plug, will you get fried?
>> If you are super paranoid, unplug it and measure the voltage at the
>> plug, which will be zero, and proceed.
>>
>> I do think you should tighten this thing up. I'm not sure it is even
>> the "official" ground lug. On the inside it is holding a small thingee
>> with wires connected to it. I'm not positive, but it may well be
>> where the
>> third wire of the a.c. line connects to chassis ground.
>>
>> If it were me, I'd tighten it up and ground to one of the cover screws.
>> And since you don't know you're own strength, just tighten good and
>> snug, you're not torquing down head bolts on a Mack truck.
>>
>> 73, Steve KW3A
>>
>
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