
Re: double insulated external power supplies - dangerous?
On Sat, 01 Mar 2008 03:12:58 -0800, gongorians wrote:
> I hope this is not too off topic here, I tried my best to find a group
> that would be appropriate to post my question... I'm a guitar player,
> and I'm using an effects processor which is powered by an external 9v
> transformer connected to mains. Like most external power supplies I see,
> this is a "double insulated" transformer, and has no ground. Now,
> knowing how dangerous it is to connect the guitar to an amplifier which
> is not grounded, I'm kind of worried whether it's possible that these
> doubly insulated ungrounded external power supplies may put a dangerous
> voltage on the guitar strings. Anyone?
Safety design on electrical appliances is done by answering the question
"how many faults do there need to be before someone gets zapped?".
In the case of your guitar amplifier, there are multiple opportunities
for you to come into contact with metal that is connected to the internal
circuitry. Without a ground connection, a single power supply fault
could put dangerous voltages on your guitar (or at least on the sound
leads). With a ground connection, that power supply fault would blow a
fuse or maybe start a small fire, but it wouldn't kill you right off. So
to have a problem requires two faults: one, the ground connection has to
break, and two, your power supply needs to have a problem.
In the case of your 9V wall wart, the 9V itself won't kill you -- you're
in more danger of someone twirling the thing at 90 miles and hour and
whacking you on the head with it than you are of getting a shock from
9V. So the thing is designed to put not one, but two layers of
insulation between you and the line voltage (and no, I don't know how
it's done in wall warts -- I should find out). Here again, it takes two
faults before a dangerous condition exists.
Make sense?
--
Tim Wescott
Control systems and communications consulting
http://www.wescottdesign.comNeed to learn how to apply control theory in your embedded system?
"Applied Control Theory for Embedded Systems" by Tim Wescott
Elsevier/Newnes,
http://www.wescottdesign.com/actfes/actfes.html