Yesterday, I got a nasty electrical shock right across my two arms (thus through my chest) while replacing the mains fuse (which is installed before the power switch as usual). My left hand was holding the chassis since it's not installed in a cab yet, and when I came to push the fuse in by holding the plastic cap (classis Fender style fuse holder), I felt electricity right across me. Not fun!
I almost felt like throwing the amp out the window, but after calming down I tested everything for continuity, made sure the chassis was properly grounded (ironically, that's how I got shocked) then proceeded to install the fuse WITH THE POWER CORD DISCONNECTED and everything was fine (only the filaments are connected right now).
The only way I see that I could have been shocked would be that I was just slightly touching the metal ring of the fuse without noticing, so as soon as it touched the socket, it found a way to ground through my other hand that was touching the chassis.
Thing is: I could swear I was only touching the plastic part, and it almost felt like the shock came from the chassis on both hands. But this makes no sense!
Although everything seems to be working fine now, I'm sort of scared of finishing this project right now...
Anything I should check that could explain the shock? Or should I just accept that I stupidly touched the metal ring and should make sure to always disconnect the power cord before replacing a fuse?
Hey, it's my first shock in 5 projects
(If you're wondering why the fuse was blown in the first place... well it blew with just the indicator lamp installed and it seems I must have used a 6V part even though I specifically ordered a 110V one... the fuse was a quick-blow so it didn't fight for long)
I almost felt like throwing the amp out the window, but after calming down I tested everything for continuity, made sure the chassis was properly grounded (ironically, that's how I got shocked) then proceeded to install the fuse WITH THE POWER CORD DISCONNECTED and everything was fine (only the filaments are connected right now).
The only way I see that I could have been shocked would be that I was just slightly touching the metal ring of the fuse without noticing, so as soon as it touched the socket, it found a way to ground through my other hand that was touching the chassis.
Thing is: I could swear I was only touching the plastic part, and it almost felt like the shock came from the chassis on both hands. But this makes no sense!
Although everything seems to be working fine now, I'm sort of scared of finishing this project right now...
Anything I should check that could explain the shock? Or should I just accept that I stupidly touched the metal ring and should make sure to always disconnect the power cord before replacing a fuse?
Hey, it's my first shock in 5 projects
(If you're wondering why the fuse was blown in the first place... well it blew with just the indicator lamp installed and it seems I must have used a 6V part even though I specifically ordered a 110V one... the fuse was a quick-blow so it didn't fight for long)
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