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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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#1
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Hello!
I found a description of a series light bulb circuit on the net at http://www.vintage-radio.com/project...-limiter.shtml and there's a statement which confused me a bit: "Note that the lamp is in the live side of the mains supply, not the neutral. This is for safety, so that the neutral side (and the chassis in AC/DC sets) stays close to earth potential no matter how much voltage is dropped across the lamp." Now I built an isolation transformer into a box with a lamp socket connected to a bypass switch, i.e. if the switch is open both socket pins are disconnected. However, I put the lamp socket into the return wire, not the live wire, because I want to use differently rated bulbs (quick exchange) and the socket, if empty, is a great place for children or other innocent people to poke their fingers in. So, even if the switch is closed connecting the lamp in-circuit, accidentally touching the fixture should be safe. For us in Germany it's possible to put a 230V plug into a live socket both ways round, so we're not sure which wire is actually live. That's why I use an LED to indicate wrong polarity; it lights when my intended neutral is live in respect to earth ground, so I can simply change plug orientation. For this reason I don't understand the statement above. If I've got an appliance which uses only two wires I'm pretty sure that no point of the chassis is directly connected to either (because any of them might be on live voltage). In fact, most of these contain a transformer or SMPS and the secondary side 0 potential is usually connected to the chassis. And if I've got an additional earth ground this is the one usually connected to metallic parts. So according to my thinking I should be quite safe putting the lamp into the return wire. Am I making a mistake and should I better put the lamp into the live side? Are there devices in other countries which use a fixed setup of live/neutral? Or am I simply already too tired to understand? Any help is greatly appreciated (my life may depend on it ;-) Regards, Leo |
#2
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Location of series lightbulb - Hot side or Neutral side.
I'd agree that it would be better to be in the Hot side since then the equipment would be operating under conditions closer to normal with the Neutral of its circuitry at Neutral/Ground potential. The return of the measuring equipment can be near Ground potential. --- sam | Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ Home Page: http://www.repairfaq.org/ Repair | Main Table of Contents: http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/ +Lasers | Sam's Laser FAQ: http://www.repairfaq.org/sam/lasersam.htm | Mirror Site Info: http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/F_mirror.html Important: The email address in this message header may no longer work. To contact me, please use the Feedback Form at repairfaq.org. Thanks. "Leo Meyer" writes: Hello! I found a description of a series light bulb circuit on the net at http://www.vintage-radio.com/project...-limiter.shtml and there's a statement which confused me a bit: "Note that the lamp is in the live side of the mains supply, not the neutral. This is for safety, so that the neutral side (and the chassis in AC/DC sets) stays close to earth potential no matter how much voltage is dropped across the lamp." Now I built an isolation transformer into a box with a lamp socket connected to a bypass switch, i.e. if the switch is open both socket pins are disconnected. However, I put the lamp socket into the return wire, not the live wire, because I want to use differently rated bulbs (quick exchange) and the socket, if empty, is a great place for children or other innocent people to poke their fingers in. So, even if the switch is closed connecting the lamp in-circuit, accidentally touching the fixture should be safe. For us in Germany it's possible to put a 230V plug into a live socket both ways round, so we're not sure which wire is actually live. That's why I use an LED to indicate wrong polarity; it lights when my intended neutral is live in respect to earth ground, so I can simply change plug orientation. For this reason I don't understand the statement above. If I've got an appliance which uses only two wires I'm pretty sure that no point of the chassis is directly connected to either (because any of them might be on live voltage). In fact, most of these contain a transformer or SMPS and the secondary side 0 potential is usually connected to the chassis. And if I've got an additional earth ground this is the one usually connected to metallic parts. So according to my thinking I should be quite safe putting the lamp into the return wire. Am I making a mistake and should I better put the lamp into the live side? Are there devices in other countries which use a fixed setup of live/neutral? Or am I simply already too tired to understand? Any help is greatly appreciated (my life may depend on it ;-) Regards, Leo |
#3
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![]() "Leo Meyer" wrote in message ... Hello! I found a description of a series light bulb circuit on the net at http://www.vintage-radio.com/project...-limiter.shtml and there's a statement which confused me a bit: "Note that the lamp is in the live side of the mains supply, not the neutral. This is for safety, so that the neutral side (and the chassis in AC/DC sets) stays close to earth potential no matter how much voltage is dropped across the lamp." Now I built an isolation transformer into a box with a lamp socket connected to a bypass switch, i.e. if the switch is open both socket pins are disconnected. Which side of the tranny is the lamp ?? If you put it in the secondary it will reduce the "finger" hazard also the ground for instruments I imagine. -- Regards ............... Rheilly Phoull |
#4
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Leo,
I think you are correct & agree the statement is confusing. Ultimately you don't need to trust your life to web sourced advice. I suggest you power your device via a "leakage current detecting breaker". Alternatively, simulate the silly child manoeuvre & put your finger where it should not be. If you are in good health & are carefull not to make a circuit across your chest you should be safe even if "stung" Pete "Leo Meyer" wrote in message ... Hello! I found a description of a series light bulb circuit on the net at http://www.vintage-radio.com/project...-limiter.shtml and there's a statement which confused me a bit: "Note that the lamp is in the live side of the mains supply, not the neutral. This is for safety, so that the neutral side (and the chassis in AC/DC sets) stays close to earth potential no matter how much voltage is dropped across the lamp." Now I built an isolation transformer into a box with a lamp socket connected to a bypass switch, i.e. if the switch is open both socket pins are disconnected. However, I put the lamp socket into the return wire, not the live wire, because I want to use differently rated bulbs (quick exchange) and the socket, if empty, is a great place for children or other innocent people to poke their fingers in. So, even if the switch is closed connecting the lamp in-circuit, accidentally touching the fixture should be safe. For us in Germany it's possible to put a 230V plug into a live socket both ways round, so we're not sure which wire is actually live. That's why I use an LED to indicate wrong polarity; it lights when my intended neutral is live in respect to earth ground, so I can simply change plug orientation. For this reason I don't understand the statement above. If I've got an appliance which uses only two wires I'm pretty sure that no point of the chassis is directly connected to either (because any of them might be on live voltage). In fact, most of these contain a transformer or SMPS and the secondary side 0 potential is usually connected to the chassis. And if I've got an additional earth ground this is the one usually connected to metallic parts. So according to my thinking I should be quite safe putting the lamp into the return wire. Am I making a mistake and should I better put the lamp into the live side? Are there devices in other countries which use a fixed setup of live/neutral? Or am I simply already too tired to understand? Any help is greatly appreciated (my life may depend on it ;-) Regards, Leo |
#5
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Alternatively, simulate the silly child manoeuvre & put your finger where it
should not be. Silly advice. As in "I *think* it's safe." Not only are we unsure of the persons qualifications/knowledge, what about the others, the novice out there reading this forum. Irrespective of the intentions, I wouldn't suggest this to anyone. __ __ __ __ __ Regards, Chris [spamblock used] |
#6
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On Fri, 21 Nov 2003 22:24:49 +0100 "Leo Meyer"
wrote: However, I put the lamp socket into the return wire, not the live wire, because I want to use differently rated bulbs (quick exchange) and the socket, if empty, is a great place for children or other innocent people to poke their fingers in. So, even if the switch is closed connecting the lamp in-circuit, accidentally touching the fixture should be safe. If you're working on the device, I think you should be more worried about a possible hot chassis than a errant finger in an open socket. I agree with the need to have several light bulbs available, but even with your switch, you could still leave the light bulb installed. There's no real reason to remove the bulb just because you've decided it's safe to bypass it. In my case, I don't have a bypass switch, I just have a screw-in type fuse which I install instead of a light bulb. BTW, with a bulb installed in the hot side of the line, the upper edge of the base threads will be at least somewhat hot. I was careful to wire the hot side of the line to the center terminal of the bulb, but there's still enough juice available at the shell to hurt or even kill. - ----------------------------------------------- Jim Adney Madison, WI 53711 USA ----------------------------------------------- |
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