markebenson
Senior Member
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It's usually the mics themselves, not the stands, and it's due to grounding issues like ground loops that put voltage on the grounding shield of mic cables or on the shield of guitar cables. Things are better now that guitar amplifiers and PA equipment made since the 1960's or so have three prong power cables.Required or not, it's probably a good idea-- there's a 'tradition' with bands that the mike stands are sometimes electrified. By accident.
Reminds me:It got me shocked many times when I touched a mic and my guitar strings at the same time, usually on the lips. Ouch.
I think the worst hit I ever took from that Fender Super before I rewired it was when I was playing in a high school gym. The pullout seating had a way it could be deployed where it would make a stage instead of bleachers, and I was wearing leather soled boots. I stepped on one of those carriage bolt heads while I was playing a solo and it damn near took me out.MDSW had an electric fry pan when we were young. She was stirring gravy with a metal spoon when I leaned in for a quick kiss. One of my hands was on the kitchen sink. Dang near got both of us at one time. I shot holes in it right after the gravy was done.
GFCII get it GFI it is thanks!
FWIW, back when I ran sound a lot in live venues I powered the FOH equipment with a heavy duty extension cord back to the same source as the onstage gear. The PA was always quieter (noise wise) that way. If you did that the question would be moot.I have an outdoor stage with gfi outlets for bands. Also on the stage is a 12 channel xlr connection box for audio only (non-powered). The cable from the audio box goes through the wall to a mixer indoors. It the indoor mixer required to be GFI protected also?
Thanks!View attachment 2566554
You have got to have priorities…after the gravy was done
All the good guitar amps are still tube amps (my opinion), and yes, they have rectified transformers to generate the high DC voltages the tubes need to operate. I don't know what you mean by the rest of that.My guess is a old tube amp has a internal transformer to boost the voltage way up for the tubes. So if way back when all amps were tube they had GFCI's and a ground fault was after the tube transformer (in the amp) the GFCI would not see the fault and thus not trip.
If the hi-voltage side is ground faulted a GFCI wont detect it. You'll still get a shock.All the good guitar amps are still tube amps (my opinion), and yes, they have rectified transformers to generate the high DC voltages the tubes need to operate. I don't know what you mean by the rest of that.
How would earth become part of the shocking current pathway?If the hi-voltage side is ground faulted a GFCI wont detect it. You'll still get a shock.
When my amp shocked me as I related in post #7 the high voltage DC wasn't the source of the voltage. It was the AC side of the circuit because the way the amp was designed, the chassis was either floating or connected to one pole or the other of the AC power through a capacitor through what was often referred to as the "suicide switch", and the AC came in through an unpolarized plug. The shield of a guitar cable is connected to the amp chassis and the strings of an electric guitar are connected to the cable shield. The steel underpinning of the gym stage was obviously grounded and the sole of my boot was obviously conductive. Zap.How would earth become part of the shocking current pathway?
Signal ground tied to the chassis of equipment.How would earth become part of the shocking current pathway?
Signal grounds are isolated from chassis ground by capacitors, and in a modern amp the chassis is solidly grounded. I guess in an older amp a cap could fail to a short, but that would blow the main fuse to the power supply. At any rate, I never heard of anyone getting shocked on stage by high voltage DC from a guitar amp. Working inside a tube amp, though, even one that has been turned off and disconnected from power, is dangerous if one does not bleed the potentially lethal voltage from the isolation caps.Signal ground tied to the chassis of equipment.