During a recent sound check, I touched my pedal board and received a mild shock. I got shocked by the pedal board chassis, and in some cases the Tip-Sleeve patch cables. Because I was limited in time, I powered down the board (VooDoo Lab Power Supplies) and pulled off all pedals and cables I didn't need to use that day. No more shock. Later I inspected the cables and could find no damage or exposed wire (though I still think this must be the issue--but what do I know?)
Anyway, the real questions?
How should I proactively check my pedalboard, etc in the future for shock hazards without using my fingers?
How would you test to find the source of the problem? How in the world did the pedalboard itself go "hot"?
Also, can 9v DC power from a VooDoo Lab PS (400mA rated) create a shock hazard?
Other info: Touching the guitar strings did not shock me; on a dry, wooden stage; I was touching nothing else when I got shocked, All outlets and A/C plugs were 3-prong, building is 12-years old. USA.
Signal path: Guitar to typical 9v DC pedal chain powered by 2 VooDoo Lab PSs, Audio output from pedalboard to Radial impedence transformer balanced line to amp 75' away.
Anyway, the real questions?
How should I proactively check my pedalboard, etc in the future for shock hazards without using my fingers?
How would you test to find the source of the problem? How in the world did the pedalboard itself go "hot"?
Also, can 9v DC power from a VooDoo Lab PS (400mA rated) create a shock hazard?
Other info: Touching the guitar strings did not shock me; on a dry, wooden stage; I was touching nothing else when I got shocked, All outlets and A/C plugs were 3-prong, building is 12-years old. USA.
Signal path: Guitar to typical 9v DC pedal chain powered by 2 VooDoo Lab PSs, Audio output from pedalboard to Radial impedence transformer balanced line to amp 75' away.
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