In the amp I'm designing I don't use the chassis for any circuit ground.
All my jacks are insulated and the pots have ground wires back to their
circuits. I bring all the circuit grounds to a single point at the chassis
ground.
Now I'm wondering, why bother connecting circuit ground to chassis ground ?
Why not let the system float with respect to the electrical system ? Wouldn't
this be safer in that it would be like the amp were run off an isolation transformer ?
It seems to me that the only way you could get a shock would be to touch two
points inside the amp simultaneously, one ground and one high voltage.
The chassis ground to the electrical system would then only be for that part of
the amp that comes before the power transformer secondary.
Paul P
All my jacks are insulated and the pots have ground wires back to their
circuits. I bring all the circuit grounds to a single point at the chassis
ground.
Now I'm wondering, why bother connecting circuit ground to chassis ground ?
Why not let the system float with respect to the electrical system ? Wouldn't
this be safer in that it would be like the amp were run off an isolation transformer ?
It seems to me that the only way you could get a shock would be to touch two
points inside the amp simultaneously, one ground and one high voltage.
The chassis ground to the electrical system would then only be for that part of
the amp that comes before the power transformer secondary.
Paul P
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