Will look into that. Thanks for correcting the mistake.Why would you do that ? It's dangerous and you are more likely to get a bad shock.
If you ground yourself & you do touch something live then you will have created a very good path for that electricity to travel through your body to.Will look into that. Thanks for correcting the mistake.
So to be sure, it's better to not ground oneself when working with 120/230V? I guess it's just due to the nature of this one project.
One hand behind your back is a must as far as I know. Or that one is scrapped as well?
Locally to me there was a man who was a HAM radio guy who owned an electronics surplus store & was very experienced. He was leaning on a transmitter case with his chest when he got a shock. It was game over for him.
It is particularly bad if you have one hand grounded & the shock is to the other hand. That way the current passes through your heart. If you are probing live you should only use one hand & it is good practise to sit on the other one to stop yourself accidently grounding yourself. That way the current doesn't have a great path to flow through your body. I normally wear those tactile cotton gloves with the rubber dipping on the palms & fingers. They may not be perfect insulators, but it's better than nothing & they kind of remind me to be careful
Thanks for the explanation. Corrected.Ok , lets say we go with grounding like you said , now if we recieve a shock it could easily pass across the chest and stop the heart , if we stay seperate from ground , insulated on floor boards with rubber soles on your shoes only a very small leakage current could pass through us ,which most likely wouldnt be lethal . Never ever touch the chassis of a tube amp with one hand while probing with the other . Direct mains power is far more dangerous due to the very low source impedence .
I think you probably need to modify your original post Goblin .
They do this because in pc's they are dealing with static sensitive deivices which are damaged easily. They shouldn't be doing this with the device switched on. As Shawnobi say this is to protect the devices not the person. So you're taking what they're doing out of context.I already understood, but when I see people working on amp heads, and on PC's, like in YT videos (not actually YouTubers, but technichians that happen to upload videos to YT), I see a lot of them "grounding" themselves, that is, using the wrist band that attaches to the metal body which is been working upon. I know this is 101 and super basic for most of you, I'm learning. What is the "reasoning" when people do this if it is potentially risky? Worse than not wearing one?
Replaced the Chinese cap with a Japanese Sanyo.What brand cap?
Enter your email address to join: