I am doing a recap on a CBS red plug Champ. It has the so called death cap on the hot side to chassis. While I don't think it is dangerous since it's a polarized plug and the ground wire is soldered to chassis, I'm vacillating on whether to leave it or remove it, and am looking for opinions. Thanks
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Grounding cap on a three prong AC cord?
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If someone was ever to use a 3-to-2 wire AC adapter, or snip off the ground pin on the AC plug, that makes the Champ a sure fire shock hazard. I'd remove the cap.
Having replaced hundreds of 2 wire AC cables with grounded 3 wire cable sets, I've wondered whether or not it's a good idea to remove the death cap. In recent years I've made the decision to remove it in all cases. I can't see that it's a good thing to have. It either does nothing useful, or provides a shock hazard if the amp isn't properly grounded thru its AC cable. I'd be interested in hearing any opinions/arguments that the death cap should be left in place, and why.This isn't the future I signed up for.
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Enzo and RG agree that it should be clipped out in this thread: http://music-electronics-forum.com/t32489/
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The death cup should be removed but nowadays most amps have an X2 rated cap in parallel with the PT primary (after the power switch and maybe together with a MOV and/or NTC) which does the same job but this ways it can't short the hot side to the chassis.
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While the cap has not yet shorted out altogether it is old and could be leaking some AC voltage to ground. I have had tiny shocks from just 3-5vac trickling through to ground while servicing an amp. To me leaving an old death cap (possibly leaky and capable to short) in an amp is just an avoidable accident waiting to happen.When the going gets weird... The weird turn pro!
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Originally posted by Leo_Gnardo View PostIf someone was ever to use a 3-to-2 wire AC adapter, or snip off the ground pin on the AC plug, that makes the Champ a sure fire shock hazard. I'd remove the cap......"I took a photo of my ohm meter... It didn't help." Enzo 8/20/22
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Originally posted by The Dude View PostRe; shoddy bars: The phrase "My brother's wife's friend used to be an electrician" comes to mind.
Definition of "ground:" what I'm laying on after I get a good shock.
"Ya don't need no stinkin' fuses!"
"Breakers" is where ya go surfin'.
"Code": that's for spies to figure out.This isn't the future I signed up for.
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Another that always makes me laugh: It's an old 2 wire system. They put in a shiny new metal box with grounded outlets, use the existing 2 wire romex, and run a little ground wire from outlet to box which goes to nothing."I took a photo of my ohm meter... It didn't help." Enzo 8/20/22
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Originally posted by The Dude View PostAnother that always makes me laugh: It's an old 2 wire system. They put in a shiny new metal box with grounded outlets, use the existing 2 wire romex, and run a little ground wire from outlet to box which goes to nothing.
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In vintage stuff, remove when doing 3 prong conversion.
As far as why they are needed with 3 prong, some modern amps use them (proper x or y types). 5150 for example. Some examples on polarity switches, some not. I wouldn't go removing those while some may call them 'death caps'.Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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Originally posted by The Dude View PostRe; shoddy bars: The phrase "My brother's wife's friend used to be an electrician" comes to mind."Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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