I'm in sort of an unusual situation with regards to safety in one of my 'creations'. It's basically a rackmount pre-amp powered from a 48v SMPS laptop supply. However, this is converted to 100v and -100v rails internally. The main thing I am concered about is the possibility of the chassis becoming live with either of these voltages. While probably not innately lethal, I don't really appreciate little love shocks from my equipment.
Normally the chassis in amps with power transformers is earthed, so that if it becomes live, the mains breaker (and whatever poor fuses in the amp) trips. Grounding the chassis and sticking a fuse in series with the power supply probably wouldn't work in case, as I'm assuming the SMPS's thermal shutdown or internal fuse would trip before my fuse ever did (I'm using something like 0.8A of the 1.3A the SMPS is rated for), probably destroying it in the process. Also, my -100v rail only supplies roughly 50mA maximum from a rather expensive DC-DC converter, which I would very much like to keep alive.
My first question is, would grounding the chassis turn it into essentially a hum receiving device? The entire pre-amp is star grounded at the power input (there's literally like 20 wires attached here - hum free).
The second rather broad question is, how exactly do I solve this problem? I know that no current is supposed to flow in the ground to chassis connection normally, so could I somehow develop a circuit breaker that disconnects power when it detects a current is flowing in the chassis?
Normally the chassis in amps with power transformers is earthed, so that if it becomes live, the mains breaker (and whatever poor fuses in the amp) trips. Grounding the chassis and sticking a fuse in series with the power supply probably wouldn't work in case, as I'm assuming the SMPS's thermal shutdown or internal fuse would trip before my fuse ever did (I'm using something like 0.8A of the 1.3A the SMPS is rated for), probably destroying it in the process. Also, my -100v rail only supplies roughly 50mA maximum from a rather expensive DC-DC converter, which I would very much like to keep alive.
My first question is, would grounding the chassis turn it into essentially a hum receiving device? The entire pre-amp is star grounded at the power input (there's literally like 20 wires attached here - hum free).
The second rather broad question is, how exactly do I solve this problem? I know that no current is supposed to flow in the ground to chassis connection normally, so could I somehow develop a circuit breaker that disconnects power when it detects a current is flowing in the chassis?
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