could've been a lot worse....
First, let me say that as a rule, I'm pretty obsessive about safety practices. I work carefully, and am mindful of the equipment I work on and the tools I use to do it. Even so, simple distractions in the shop, rushing on a job, or even working under the assumption that a familiar piece of gear is working as it should, can lead you to let your guard down and make careless mistakes.
In my case yesterday, I was careless trying to remove the main board on a Rivera so I could replace the +V regulator and caps for the heater supply. Space was tight and the board was being stubborn. As I was backing the board tight up against the speaker jack pcb on the back panel to get the pots shaft to clear the chassis, I was right over the output tubes board and probably got the screen supply on the heal of my left hand and a standoff with my right hand and... that backed me right off my bench real quick. There was a little pain in my hands, but I was lucky in that I'm pretty certain that the caps weren't charged near the full supply voltage. If it were, that could be a dangerous charge with my heart in the discharge path. If I could venture a guess, I'd say maybe 80V-100V (maybe less, maybe more??).
I'll definitely take being lucky, but I would never rely on it. Luck runs out.
First, let me say that as a rule, I'm pretty obsessive about safety practices. I work carefully, and am mindful of the equipment I work on and the tools I use to do it. Even so, simple distractions in the shop, rushing on a job, or even working under the assumption that a familiar piece of gear is working as it should, can lead you to let your guard down and make careless mistakes.
In my case yesterday, I was careless trying to remove the main board on a Rivera so I could replace the +V regulator and caps for the heater supply. Space was tight and the board was being stubborn. As I was backing the board tight up against the speaker jack pcb on the back panel to get the pots shaft to clear the chassis, I was right over the output tubes board and probably got the screen supply on the heal of my left hand and a standoff with my right hand and... that backed me right off my bench real quick. There was a little pain in my hands, but I was lucky in that I'm pretty certain that the caps weren't charged near the full supply voltage. If it were, that could be a dangerous charge with my heart in the discharge path. If I could venture a guess, I'd say maybe 80V-100V (maybe less, maybe more??).
I'll definitely take being lucky, but I would never rely on it. Luck runs out.
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