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uk.rec.audio (General Audio and Hi-Fi) (uk.rec.audio) Discussion and exchange of hi-fi audio equipment.

Quad 405 internal grounding.



 
 
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  #1 (permalink)  
Old August 2nd 14, 02:04 PM posted to uk.rec.audio
mick
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 26
Default Quad 405 internal grounding.

On Sat, 02 Aug 2014 11:24:57 +1000, Phil Allison wrote:

"mick"

That would make it a Class II (double-insulated) appliance.


** Absurd crap !!!



Ah... yes... That screen couldn't make it Class II could it? It would
need to be earthed. lol I missed that one!

I take that back, the Quad 303 definitely requires a mains earth to the
metalwork in order to comply with current UK regs. It can't rely on the
input connector as that can be unplugged while leaving the mains supply
connected. That makes it even more sensible not to connect signal earth
directly to chassis in the 303.


The basic principle of Class II is *NOT* to rely on the mains earth for
user safety.

Two reasons:

1. If the mains earth connection is missing anywhere, the equipment
still operates ( with no warning to the user) and you have no safety.

2. If the AC outlet or equipment plug is miswired, active can appear on
the earth conductor and you have a lethal situation.



The principle of Class II is that there is NO REQUIREMENT to rely on
earthing for user protection at all, as all mains-carrying wiring is
double-insulated away from the user side. Note that phone chargers etc
are virtually all Class II. In the UK these have a dummy plastic earth
pin which is only used to open the live & neutral shutters on the socket.

The mains output sockets on the 33 almost certainly wouldn't be legal now
anyway. Getting live and neutral right way round is a 50/50 guess.


A very nasty example of scenario "2" occurs when the equipment plug has
earth and neutral wires reversed - which goes unnoticed until the day it
is plugged into an outlet that has active and neutral reversed.


Agreed. It's only relatively recently that domestic wiring in the UK has
been using earth-leakage protection. Older installations (including my
own!) don't have it - in fact, I'm still on rewirable fuses here!
Consequently we tend to be careful about wiring plugs & sockets up
correctly. Even when properties are being refurbished over here, there
is no legal requirement to change any existing distribution boards etc.
unless they are damaged. Consequently there are a lot of houses in the
same condition as mine.

  #2 (permalink)  
Old August 3rd 14, 02:04 AM posted to uk.rec.audio
Phil Allison[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 635
Default Quad 405 internal grounding.


"mick"

The basic principle of Class II is *NOT* to rely on the mains earth for
user safety.

Two reasons:

1. If the mains earth connection is missing anywhere, the equipment
still operates ( with no warning to the user) and you have no safety.

2. If the AC outlet or equipment plug is miswired, active can appear on
the earth conductor and you have a lethal situation.


The principle of Class II is that there is NO REQUIREMENT to rely on
earthing for user protection at all,


** Not correct.

There must be NO earth connection made to the item.

The familiar notice reads:

" Double Insulated Do Not Earth. "
-------------------------------------


A very nasty example of scenario "2" occurs when the equipment plug has
earth and neutral wires reversed - which goes unnoticed until the day it
is plugged into an outlet that has active and neutral reversed.


Agreed. It's only relatively recently that domestic wiring in the UK has
been using earth-leakage protection. Older installations (including my
own!) don't have it - in fact, I'm still on rewirable fuses here!
Consequently we tend to be careful about wiring plugs & sockets up
correctly. Even when properties are being refurbished over here, there
is no legal requirement to change any existing distribution boards etc.
unless they are damaged. Consequently there are a lot of houses in the
same condition as mine.



** Much the same situation exists in Australia, though it varies from state
to state.

Interestingly, in the USA it has been compulsory to fit safety devices to AC
outlets in bathrooms for decades.

Originally they used mechanical "core balance relays" instead of the modern
electronic version.


.... Phil


  #3 (permalink)  
Old August 3rd 14, 08:27 AM posted to uk.rec.audio
Dave Plowman (News)
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Posts: 5,872
Default Quad 405 internal grounding.

In article ,
Phil Allison wrote:
The principle of Class II is that there is NO REQUIREMENT to rely on
earthing for user protection at all,


** Not correct.


There must be NO earth connection made to the item.


The familiar notice reads:


" Double Insulated Do Not Earth. "
-------------------------------------


Which means then in amplifier terms it cannot be connected to a device
where the signal ground is connected to main ground?

Something wrong there...

--
*I want it all and I want it delivered

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
  #4 (permalink)  
Old August 3rd 14, 08:57 AM posted to uk.rec.audio
Phil Allison[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 635
Default Quad 405 internal grounding.


"Dave Plowman (Nutcase TROLL)"
Phil Allison

The principle of Class II is that there is NO REQUIREMENT to rely on
earthing for user protection at all,


** Not correct.


There must be NO earth connection made to the item.


The familiar notice reads:


" Double Insulated Do Not Earth. "
-------------------------------------


Which means then in amplifier terms it cannot be connected to a device
where the signal ground is connected to main ground?

Something wrong there...


** Absolutely correct.

Class II items should ONLY be interconnected with other class II items,
however with audio and video gear, everyone breaks the safety rule. The
hazard of doing this is an X rated topic that one must never mention.

Class II items are inherently safe until you connect them to a class I
item - so when that class I item develops a safety fault, the whole shebang
becomes a death-trap.

With a class I system, each item grounds the others so it is also inherently
safe.

In the world of live music, I have come mixed class I / II systems that are
very scary.



..... Phil



  #5 (permalink)  
Old August 3rd 14, 09:16 AM posted to uk.rec.audio
Dave Plowman (News)
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5,872
Default Quad 405 internal grounding.

In article ,
Phil Allison wrote:

In the world of live music, I have come mixed class I / II systems that
are very scary.


In UK TV studios etc, before the days of RCDs etc, every single item of
unknown equipment - like say a guitar amp etc supplied by a musician - was
fed via a mains isolation transformer. Expensive and time consuming but
very necessary.

--
*I'm planning to be spontaneous tomorrow *

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
  #6 (permalink)  
Old August 3rd 14, 09:39 AM posted to uk.rec.audio
Don Pearce[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,358
Default Quad 405 internal grounding.

On Sun, 03 Aug 2014 10:16:40 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:

In article ,
Phil Allison wrote:

In the world of live music, I have come mixed class I / II systems that
are very scary.


In UK TV studios etc, before the days of RCDs etc, every single item of
unknown equipment - like say a guitar amp etc supplied by a musician - was
fed via a mains isolation transformer. Expensive and time consuming but
very necessary.


We now have the annual PAT test. In my lab once a year a chap comes
round and tests the integrity of the grounding of everything that has
a mains plug, from the 100 grand Network Analyser to the kettle in the
kitchen.

Once he has gone all the oscilloscopes get their grounds removed once
again so they can make floating voltage measurements and not introduce
ground loop mess into normal measurements.

It doesn't actually make anything safer, but the company lawyers like
it.

d
  #7 (permalink)  
Old August 3rd 14, 04:37 PM posted to uk.rec.audio
Jim Lesurf[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,668
Default Quad 405 internal grounding.

In article , Don Pearce
wrote:
On Sun, 03 Aug 2014 10:16:40 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:


We now have the annual PAT test. In my lab once a year a chap comes
round and tests the integrity of the grounding of everything that has a
mains plug, from the 100 grand Network Analyser to the kettle in the
kitchen.


Once he has gone all the oscilloscopes get their grounds removed once
again so they can make floating voltage measurements and not introduce
ground loop mess into normal measurements.


It doesn't actually make anything safer, but the company lawyers like it.


Nice to see that people are maintaining the old traditions. :-)

FWIW When I used to install and use systems on the old UKIRT (Telescope)
they were always 'grounded'. But always gave you a multi-kV static shock if
you were the first to touch them after they'd been left un-touched for
about 10 mins or more. The ground connection was essentially dry rock in a
dry atmosphere. So was little more than a common reference. Certainly not a
way of ensuring no overall charge potential. 8-]

One trick was to send the newest PhD student to adjust the kit and the
watch to see if we could see the spark in the darkened dome. Usually
accompanied by a suitable noise from the student. :-) Rite of passage.

Jim

--
Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me.
Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm
Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html
Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html

  #8 (permalink)  
Old August 3rd 14, 09:42 AM posted to uk.rec.audio
Phil Allison[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 635
Default Quad 405 internal grounding.


"Dave Plowman (Nutcase TROL)"

In the world of live music, I have come mixed class I / II systems that
are very scary.


In UK TV studios etc, before the days of RCDs etc, every single item of
unknown equipment - like say a guitar amp etc supplied by a musician - was
fed via a mains isolation transformer. Expensive and time consuming but
very necessary.


** Really ????

Bet the Beeb et alia stopped doing that when they nearly electrocuted the
first guitarist.

1. The most common error in AC plug wiring is Neutral-Earth reverse - the
item works and there is no big problem until you find an AC outlet that has
Active and Neutral reversed.

2. Add a 240:240V iso-transformer that carries the supply ground through to
the outlet and it becomes instantly lethal. Draw it out on paper if you
doubt me.

FYI:

Supply earth goes direct to one side of the amp's AC tranny, then the
iso-tranny's 240V winding and back to the amp's chassis. The amp will not
run - but the chassis is 240AC live.

Oooouuucchhhhhh !!!!!!!!..



..... Phil
















  #9 (permalink)  
Old August 3rd 14, 11:41 AM posted to uk.rec.audio
Dave Plowman (News)
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5,872
Default Quad 405 internal grounding.

In article ,
Phil Allison wrote:
In UK TV studios etc, before the days of RCDs etc, every single item
of unknown equipment - like say a guitar amp etc supplied by a
musician - was fed via a mains isolation transformer. Expensive and
time consuming but very necessary.


** Really ????


Yes really.

Bet the Beeb et alia stopped doing that when they nearly electrocuted
the first guitarist.


Sigh.

1. The most common error in AC plug wiring is Neutral-Earth reverse -
the item works and there is no big problem until you find an AC outlet
that has Active and Neutral reversed.


Then that device would simply not work.

2. Add a 240:240V iso-transformer that carries the supply ground
through to the outlet and it becomes instantly lethal. Draw it out on
paper if you doubt me.


That's why they didn't.
FYI:


Supply earth goes direct to one side of the amp's AC tranny, then the
iso-tranny's 240V winding and back to the amp's chassis. The amp will
not run - but the chassis is 240AC live.


There is no 'live' and 'neutral' on the output of an isolating transformer.

--
*Warning: Dates in Calendar are closer than they appear.

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
  #10 (permalink)  
Old August 3rd 14, 08:34 AM posted to uk.rec.audio
Dave Plowman (News)
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5,872
Default Quad 405 internal grounding.

In article ,
Phil Allison wrote:
** Much the same situation exists in Australia, though it varies from
state to state.


Interestingly, in the USA it has been compulsory to fit safety devices
to AC outlets in bathrooms for decades.


In the UK until fairly recently, the *only* AC socket allowed in a
bathroom was a shaver socket fed via an isolating transformer. Also things
like light switches had either to be outside the room, or of an insulated
type like a pull cord one.

--
*If I agreed with you, we'd both be wrong.

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
 




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