I have a small amp here which has no power transformer. From what I have read this is unsafe and it is recommended to use an isolation transformer. I have a few questions in this regard.
1. The info I've read says that if there is a fault and the chassis becomes connected to the hot side of the mains power and if my body is at ground potential, when I touch the chassis I am providing a return path to ground for the electrical current. The amp has a three prong plug installed with ground wire connected to the chassis. Does this not eliminate my body as a path to ground or is it that in this case there would simply be two paths to ground as opposed to just one?
2. Again with the idea of my body being at ground potential, is this typically the case? Is my body always at ground potential, or put another way, is my body always a viable path to ground, or does it matter where I am standing etc?
3. Why is it safer to have a transformer isolating my body? The info I read seems to imply that if I touch a 300V leg of a PT secondary with only one hand I will not get shocked. This is news to me as I seem to recall having done this or similar a few years back during a momentary lapse and getting bit hard.
- BL
1. The info I've read says that if there is a fault and the chassis becomes connected to the hot side of the mains power and if my body is at ground potential, when I touch the chassis I am providing a return path to ground for the electrical current. The amp has a three prong plug installed with ground wire connected to the chassis. Does this not eliminate my body as a path to ground or is it that in this case there would simply be two paths to ground as opposed to just one?
2. Again with the idea of my body being at ground potential, is this typically the case? Is my body always at ground potential, or put another way, is my body always a viable path to ground, or does it matter where I am standing etc?
3. Why is it safer to have a transformer isolating my body? The info I read seems to imply that if I touch a 300V leg of a PT secondary with only one hand I will not get shocked. This is news to me as I seem to recall having done this or similar a few years back during a momentary lapse and getting bit hard.
- BL
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