Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems.

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Default fffcj Tiny little 'shock' and earth question .

My Engl Fireball 60Watt amp and I are living in Spain . When I touched
the front panel , I got a very very small shock on a finger which had
recently been cut . Nothing was detectable with any of my other dry
fingers .I voltage tested between ground at the wall socket and the
amp , ac and dc . Nothing at all . Then , set on AC , I happened to
be holding one of the probes , with the other attached to the wall
point ground . 2 volts ac registered . I'm stumped . I don't appear to
be attached to anything else !
Where is this small voltage coming from ?
Do I need to worry about the earthing in this humble Spanish cottage ?
Are little 'changes' like this normal , and quite safe ?
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Default fffcj Tiny little 'shock' and earth question .

fffcj wrote:
My Engl Fireball 60Watt amp and I are living in Spain . When I touched
the front panel , I got a very very small shock on a finger which had
recently been cut . Nothing was detectable with any of my other dry
fingers .I voltage tested between ground at the wall socket and the
amp , ac and dc . Nothing at all . Then , set on AC , I happened to
be holding one of the probes , with the other attached to the wall
point ground . 2 volts ac registered . I'm stumped . I don't appear to
be attached to anything else !
Where is this small voltage coming from ?
Do I need to worry about the earthing in this humble Spanish cottage ?
Are little 'changes' like this normal , and quite safe ?


You form a capacitive divider.
There is say .2 picofarad between you and an isolated
wire carrying 240 volts.
Your capacity is about 20 picofarad, referred to ground..
that means you carry about 1/100 th of the mains voltage,
or about 2 volts.
At virtually no current.
Everything is as it should be.
This is also the reason you hear hum from the speaker, when you
touch an audio iinput.
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