Hi, I got a small shock from my SF Princeton when I was touching my guitar and groping around a gas space heater (which I believe is grounded through the gas line, it has no electrical connections). I have installed a 3-wire cord and disconnected the ground switch. I tested for continuity from the plug to the chassis and it was only present at the ground, I also checked the input on my pedal board to the ground with the same result and the tried to find a voltage between my guitar and the heater.
Basically I can't seem to find any way to recreate the problem to fix it. Are there any other tests I can perform? How do I check that the three wire power cord is wired properly? I'm pretty sure it is as I recall being pretty cautious and double checking the wiring. My pedals are powered through a powerstrip plugged into the same Furman Rackrider as my amp. Is it possible for a voltage to build up as the amp has been on longer and the problem "resets" when I turn it off. I did the work on my amp a couple of months ago and this is the first problem I've had.
Basically I can't seem to find any way to recreate the problem to fix it. Are there any other tests I can perform? How do I check that the three wire power cord is wired properly? I'm pretty sure it is as I recall being pretty cautious and double checking the wiring. My pedals are powered through a powerstrip plugged into the same Furman Rackrider as my amp. Is it possible for a voltage to build up as the amp has been on longer and the problem "resets" when I turn it off. I did the work on my amp a couple of months ago and this is the first problem I've had.
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