ghc
Joined: 15/06/07
Posts: 83
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Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
#576976 - 06/02/08 06:21 AM
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Hi everyone !! Ok, if you are interested(and it is, i'm advising to read through it,
plenty of good info) i've posted this discussion before on 24/08/07 ''Electric shock from
mic while touching guitar, ......'' I just came across the same problem a while ago,
last week !! My mixer was plugged in to a socket in the wall, so as musicians, but
spread in different corners, different sockets (all on the walls). And, to stop the
mic from being electically charged, all i had to do was: Plug out my mixer which was going
to a socket in the wall, and in the same socket (on the wall) i plugged in an extention
lead, and then i plugged in the mixer in the extention+vocalists guitar ?! Sounds
strange to me but it worked !! Could anyone explain to me (and to all of us) why did
it work ?! I just can't understand it !! Lost !!  Thanks
guys !!
-------------------- Don't blame the world
Find a solution !!
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#577000 - 06/02/08 09:24 AM
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Assuming the guitar amp was properly earthed, then by plugging the guitar amp into the
same mains extension as the mixer, you ensured their earths were at the same potential,
and thus no shocks.
I suspect the socket that the guitarist was using
originally had no earth, or a very poor earth.
There really is no excuse these
days for not checking each and every mains socket used in every venue with a simple socket
tester to make sure they are wired correctly and are safe to use.
It is also a
much better idea to run everything from the same socket or adjacent sockets, to reduce the
risk.
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Sheriton
Joined: 27/01/03
Posts: 1554
Loc: Leicester, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#577025 - 06/02/08 10:07 AM
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Call me extremely pedantic...
It's very rare that a mic will ever give you an
electric shock. It's almost always the fault of the guitar / amp; it's only by touching
the earthed mic that this becomes apparent. It always winds me up when people blame the
mics rather than the true cause...
-------------------- There's nothing we can't face... Except for bunnies
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Paul Soundscape
Joined: 27/06/06
Posts: 722
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#577029 - 06/02/08 10:10 AM
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i dont think it has anything to do with the amp. i played at the colston hall in
bristol and i even had problems there, and my equipment is certainly earthed! It was
that our amps were plugged in to a different circuit to the mixing desk
-------------------- Live Sound and Studio Engineer
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Paul Soundscape]
#577042 - 06/02/08 10:41 AM
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Quote Paul Supersonix Studios:
i
dont think it has anything to do with the amp.
To be fair, it is most usually a problem associated with a
disconnected earth on guitar amps (to kill the hum, man!).
Quote:
my equipment is
certainly earthed!
I'm glad
to hear it, but can you be as certain that the socket you plugged it into is properly
earthed, or that the equipment, sockets, mains cables and plugboards that everyone else
uses are properly earthed?
The only way to be sure and safe is to test the
mains sockets you plan to use before using them, and check that everyone's equipment is
earthed correctly before allowing them to plug anything in.
Quote:
It was that our amps
were plugged in to a different circuit to the mixing desk
Then there was a potentially lethal fault
somewhere in that building. The difference in earth potential between sockets should be no
more than a volt or two at most. To feel a shock when touching an earthed mic suggests
that an earth was missing from the singing guitarist's rig. If that's the case, then he is
playing on borrowed time....
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Paul Soundscape
Joined: 27/06/06
Posts: 722
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#577102 - 06/02/08 12:57 PM
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yeah well as hundreds of professional touring chart topping artists play there every year
you would have thought that it would be properly earthed? maybe not,
the reason i
said it wasn't the guitar amp was because i was getting shocks(and i play bass and sing)
and so was our guitarist(who also sings) and its never happened before?
Edited by Paul Supersonix Studios (06/02/08 12:59 PM)
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Paul Soundscape]
#577112 - 06/02/08 01:24 PM
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Quote Paul Supersonix Studios:
yeah well as hundreds of professional touring chart topping artists play there every
year you would have thought that it would be properly earthed? maybe not,
The first rule of not dying is to not make
assumptions like that. Faults happen. Things can change. When we rigged for some SOS
seminars at the old Wembley Arena site, I found four faulty sockets in the same conference
room -- a room that was used everyday by all and sundry. One socket had no earth, two were
live-neutral reversed, and one just had no power. It happens! Often, the screws clamping
the cables inside work lose or tarniosh and oxidise. Sometimes they weren't done up tight
in the firtst place, and as the cable oxidises the connection goes high-resistance. That's
all that's needed to make the safety earth next to useless! Sometimes someone else has had
a major fault and the cable or the socket has been damaged but not reported to be fixed.
Hence my advice to check them before using them.
Quote:
the reason i said it wasn't the guitar amp was
because i was getting shocks(and i play bass and sing) and so was our guitarist(who also
sings) and its never happened before?
Were both your amps plugged into the same mains extension plug
board by any chance? Or the same wall socket? If so, you've probably just identified where
the missing earth was.
Clearly, there was a serious and potentially fatal
fault somewhere. It could have been the earths protecting the sound desk, or it could have
been the earths protecting the guitar and bass amps.
In my experience,
shocks when touching a microphone are almost always because the mic body is properly
earthed but the guitar amp's earth is disconnected, so that the 'earthed' metalwork on the
amp (and guitar string earthing) floats up to half mains voltage (115V).
You
won't feel that while playing as long as you don't touch anything else earthed, but the
moment you do, you'll get the shock.
Now the missing earth might not be
because the safety earths in the amps have been deliberately disconnected -- it could just
as easily be because a mains cable or extension board has been damaged, or the wall socket
could be faulty, as I've explaiend.
It's a less common scenario, but
certainly still one worth investigating, that it could equally have been the other way
around -- the guitar amps were properly earthed and it as the mixing console earth that
was at fault. In that case, the mic's body would have floated to 115V, but you would have
got the same tingle effect through the grounded strings.
Sadly, without all
the same equipment set up in the same room in the same way, we'll only ever be guessing
what the actual problem was. But it would be foolish to dismiss it and not check
everything you can carefully.
As I said, the location of that discontinuous
earth (or earths -- there could be more than one fault here) could be at any of a variety
of places. The wall sockets, the extension cables, the mains plugs, the mains cables, the
pluig-boards, or inside the equipment itself. The only way to be sure is to check every
single mains cable you used, every extension cable, and every piece of equipment.
In fact, this really is something you should do regularly anyway. Cables get
snagged and cut, or tripped over pulling the wires from the plugs, and screw connections
inside plugs can work loose and wires corrode and oxidise.
If they all
check out okay, then it was probably the mains sockets in the venue -- it really isn't
that uncommon! Buy a tester, and make a point of using it next time. it only take a few
seconds. Also, to be almost completely safe, make sure you run all your own equipment
through an RCD, and persaude all the others in the band (and FOH) to use RCDs too.
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Paul Soundscape
Joined: 27/06/06
Posts: 722
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#577136 - 06/02/08 02:14 PM
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ok thanks hugh that makes a bit more sense now, it was a while ago so cant exactly
remember where we were plugged in to but yeah i always use RCD's now.
it only
happened when we sang and touched our strings.
Cheers
Edited by Paul Supersonix Studios (06/02/08 02:15 PM)
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Paul Soundscape]
#577177 - 06/02/08 03:47 PM
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Quote Paul Supersonix Studios:
it
only happened when we sang and touched our strings.
Yes, it would.
Normally, the strings are earthed
through the guitar cable's screen to the guitar amp, and from their to the mains safety
earth of the amp's mains lead.
The mic body is earthed through the mic cable
screen to the mixer, and from there to the mains safety earth of the mixer's mains
lead.
If one or other of those mains safety earths becomes high resistance or
disconnected, then the mains input filtering of the amp or mixer will tend to pull
everything connected to the now disconnected earth line up to half mains volts (115V in
the UK and Europe).
If you are playing the guitar while touching the mic body
as you sing, you complete a circuit, one side of which is earthed, and the other is
sitting at 115V. it doesn't matter which way around it is -- which side is still earthed
and which is floating -- the results ae the same.
If you're lucky it will just
tingle unpleasantly. If you're unlucky there'll be a bang and the gig will come to a
premature end... as will the person who formed the link in the circuit.
You
said this only affected you and the guitarist, and that's often the case. Vocalists
generally only touch the mic and nothing else -- so there is no circuit. Likewise keyboard
players generally only touch plastic keys, so there's still no circuit.
The
worst case scenario is when the circuit is formed across the hands -- one hand on the
guitar strings, the other on the mic. That way any current flow is straight across the
chest, through the heart, and is likely to stop the heart. One ex guitarist...
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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jamaicanDave
Joined: 24/01/08
Posts: 28
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#577224 - 06/02/08 04:41 PM
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never happened to me b 4 but thanx 4 posting that thread... it's gonna save me loads
of time in the future...cause i'm sure it'll happen
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dmills
Joined: 25/08/06
Posts: 2129
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Paul Soundscape]
#577282 - 06/02/08 06:40 PM
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Quote Paul Supersonix Studios:
i played at the colston hall in bristol and i even had problems there, and my
equipment is certainly earthed! It was that our amps were plugged in to a different
circuit to the mixing desk
I
could tell you a few stories about that venue, but probably had better not.
Most touring acts will plug distro into the heavy stage power tie stage right (good for
400A or so IIRC) and forgo the use of the random 13A points except for back stage tea and
coffee.
That the earthing is a little suspect comes as no surprise (No
reflection on the house crew, council run venue and Bristol council, well 'nuff said).
I would heavily advocate always testing before you plug in anywhere, in any venue
and that the use of RCD protection on backline supplies is just good sense (along with FOH
if you don't trust things).
Note that most simple socket testers cannot
identify a neutral/earth reverse.
There are a scary number of dodgy sockets
out there, test everything and be paranoid, it's good for you.
Incidentally,
IME CEE form sockets are less likely to be miswired as people pay more attention to the
'industrial' power then they do to the domestic stuff (Good reason to use them if
available).
Regards, Dan.
-------------------- Audiophiles use phono leads because they are unbalanced people!
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Paul Soundscape
Joined: 27/06/06
Posts: 722
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#577296 - 06/02/08 07:14 PM
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the engineer was a right pr*ck he just said "deal with it". in the end our guitarist just
got so annoyed at the end of the set just smashed over the mic stand lol
-------------------- Live Sound and Studio Engineer
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DingoDave
Joined: 05/02/08
Posts: 79
Loc: Cardiff
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#577356 - 06/02/08 09:36 PM
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Hehe my guitarist was getting static off his guitar in band practice dont know why it
happend, he was also using a mic at the time and quite close to the amp and socket. It was
amusing to watch when now and again hed jump in the middle of a song with a small yelp!
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Paul Soundscape
Joined: 27/06/06
Posts: 722
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#577368 - 06/02/08 10:06 PM
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haha yeah its not fun if your being shocked after a 30 minute set my mouth was burning.
-------------------- Live Sound and Studio Engineer
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Paul Soundscape]
#577418 - 07/02/08 01:18 AM
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Quote Paul Supersonix Studios:
the engineer was a right pr*ck he just said "deal with it". in the end our guitarist
just got so annoyed at the end of the set just smashed over the mic stand lol
You are completely within your right
to walk out there.
NOTHING is worth the risk you just put yourself through(30
minutes???!!!!). If they have a problem with you walking out, tell them you will feel
happy to have the local inspector come in and make sure the building is up to code and if
that is the case you will come back. But until then something is very much NOT right
there and they are endangering lives like that. Honestly the engineer that says, deal
with it, to something like that needs to be fired on the spot. Maybe then he will learn
not to screw with electrocuting people.
Seablade
NOTE: I am
in the US, though I would imagine a similar safety inspection exists in the EU for such
situations.
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dmills
Joined: 25/08/06
Posts: 2129
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#577428 - 07/02/08 01:44 AM
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City council venue Seablade, the place (a ~1,800 seat somewhat run down neoclassical pile
last time I was there) is owned by the AHJ! I understand that they have done some work on
it in the interim, but the real plan for as long as I can remember has been to replace it.
This is the council which owns another venue where you always had to ensure a
lantern was plugged into the first socket on the FOH bar and securely clamped to the bar
as that was the only one with the earth connected (Lots of moaning from us, zero action
from the council, and this is in 240/415V land)! Mind you, they also supplied me a 'street
lighting technician' to fill a rider requiring the venue to provide a 'lighting
technician', nice guy, but about as useful as a chocolate fireguard.
I do
wonder if that 'engineer' was actually a hired in PA company as I don't recall that place
having any PA worthy of the name (And from what I recall of working there a few times,
that does not sound like behaviour the resident chief would have accepted from his
people).
It does however sound like the sort of thing a pissed off third party
sound provider might perpetrate after a bad day.
Regards, Dan.
-------------------- Audiophiles use phono leads because they are unbalanced people!
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: DingoDave]
#577435 - 07/02/08 02:05 AM
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Quote DingoDave:
Hehe my
guitarist was getting static off his guitar in band practice dont know why it happend
Not being funny here, mate, but
you are dismissing a seriously life-threatening situation here. You need to find out why
it happened. Something is UNSAFE in your rig.
Quote:
It was amusing to watch when now and again hed
jump in the middle of a song with a small yelp!
I wonder how many people will laugh
when your mate -- OR YOU -- DIE!
This is serious and it happens everyday. And
if something nasty does happen, and it can be shown that you were aware of the fault but
did nothing to rectify the problem, it won't do you much good either!
Seriously
-- sort this out NOW. Get the gear checked. Get the room wiring checked.
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Matt P
member
Joined: 19/06/04
Posts: 348
Loc: Manchester, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#577444 - 07/02/08 02:45 AM
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I know it's been said a million times before, but surely we can all agree that this topic
warrants being made a sticky.
Also, Dan/Hugh/anyone, do you have a particular
socket tester that you recommend? I know for a fact that my rather basic Maplins jobby
(the name of which completely escapes me) will spot a disconnected earth, but won't pick
up on a reversed live/neutral. Dan, I think I've heard you talk about stuff Martindale(?)
before now?
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: dmills]
#577457 - 07/02/08 06:13 AM
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Quote dmills:
City council venue
Seablade, the place (a ~1,800 seat somewhat run down neoclassical pile last time I was
there) is owned by the AHJ! I understand that they have done some work on it in the
interim, but the real plan for as long as I can remember has been to replace it.
This is the council which owns another venue where you always had to ensure a lantern
was plugged into the first socket on the FOH bar and securely clamped to the bar as that
was the only one with the earth connected (Lots of moaning from us, zero action from the
council, and this is in 240/415V land)! Mind you, they also supplied me a 'street lighting
technician' to fill a rider requiring the venue to provide a 'lighting technician', nice
guy, but about as useful as a chocolate fireguard.
I do wonder if that
'engineer' was actually a hired in PA company as I don't recall that place having any PA
worthy of the name (And from what I recall of working there a few times, that does not
sound like behaviour the resident chief would have accepted from his people).
It does however sound like the sort of thing a pissed off third party sound provider
might perpetrate after a bad day.
Regards, Dan.
Again, yank over here sadly, but I would say
then the next step is to take it over the city. At least in the US this would violate
NATIONAL safety standards, so there is nothing stopping someone above the city from
shutting it down if need be. Again I would venture a guess in the EU that a similar
situation exists.
I know it sucks, but honestly they need to be forced to do
something. This is waiting for someone to die as described right now. No hyperbole at
all, it literally is a matter of waiting till the first person dies before anything is
done unless someone goes over their heads if the city is unwilling to do anything with
it.
Honestly, there have been venues I have told production companies never to
book again as they were dangerous along this level. This would certainly qualify, step
one is to never play it again, and make sure noone you know plays it until they get this
fixed. Step 2 would be to report it over the heads of the city IMO.
Seablade
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Matt P]
#577458 - 07/02/08 06:15 AM
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Quote Matt P:
I know it's been
said a million times before, but surely we can all agree that this topic warrants being
made a sticky.
Yea at this
rate, I gotta agree, something needs to be done to keep this perfectly visible, not sure
if a sticky thread is the right answer or not. Maybe an FAQ section along the lines of
Martin's computer FAQs? Ah well up for the mods/admins to decide not me.
Anyways to answer your other question I bought this kit for basic electrical analysis
that I carry with me.
http://www.lowes.com/lowes/lkn?action=productDetail&productId=205783-7
2068-TK-30&lpage=none
I believe the socket tester in it wil check for a
live/neutral reverse, but I will double check tomorrow. At the moment I need to get some
sleep and don't feel like getting dressed to go out to the car to check.
Seablade
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Nathan
Joined: 13/09/04
Posts: 1872
Loc: lincolnshire government experi...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: seablade]
#577544 - 07/02/08 10:44 AM
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when i have this problem i use a multimeter and the odd radiator to find which earth is
bad and then i put a sticker on it saying "Faulty. This is not to be used until repaired"
then i tell the venue management what i've done and suggest that it's repaired. If i'm
feeling really bolshy i'll follow it up and report them to the local coucil, their
licensing authority or HSE if the sticker was removed without being rectified (i have done
this to a council venue whose 63Amp supply was LN reversed). if you knew what
you were doing and if you had the appropriate test gear, you could measure between the
earth connections on the stage and mixer supply sockets and see if there is a voltage
-more than 5 volts or so suggests a possible problem, double figures means a definite
issue with earthing in the building. i have found over a 120 volts on an earth in a
leisure complex venue. a missing or dodgy earth is potentially lethal should a
fault condition occur, and the venue would be fined heavily or shut down once HSE had been
in there should there be an accident (happened to a franchise of a food chain in my home
town after a lethal shock). also any venue needs an annual electrical inpection
to get their PEL, so it would be good to ask for a copy of the report for this
"council-run" venue -i think as a council they are obliged to supply one to a formal
request. stir up some mud, you might get things to happen before someone dies.  that aside, the usual reason for shocks on microphones is a removed earth on
guitar amp plugs -in this case it could be a bad earth from either side from the mains
sockets. anybody who lives in Bristol fancy verifying this? it does sound like
something does need to be done.
-------------------- planet nine
lincoln, uk.
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feline1
active member
Joined: 23/06/03
Posts: 3651
Loc: Brighton, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#577551 - 07/02/08 10:56 AM
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Thanks to previous SoS threads on this, I now always bring my 'Martindale socket tester'
to everygig, and fit a couple of Wickes RCDs onto the bands' gear. Occasionally they trip out in the middle of songs, so the band can be a little "auch!
not that bloody thing that ruins our gigs!" but I just keep reminding them that leaving
the stage in an ambulance would ruin the gig even more.
-------------------- ~~~ A weasel hath not such a deal of spleen as you are tossed with! www.feline1.co.uk ~~~
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Nathan
Joined: 13/09/04
Posts: 1872
Loc: lincolnshire government experi...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: feline1]
#577563 - 07/02/08 11:12 AM
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find an electrician friend to measure your gears leakage current feline -most PAT testing
gear will do this -see if you have some borderline equipment or if you have any congealed
beer in any of your socket strips...
-------------------- planet nine
lincoln, uk.
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Paul Soundscape
Joined: 27/06/06
Posts: 722
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Nathan]
#577571 - 07/02/08 11:23 AM
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Quote:
I do wonder if that
'engineer' was actually a hired in PA company as I don't recall that place having any PA
worthy of the name (And from what I recall of working there a few times, that does not
sound like behaviour the resident chief would have accepted from his people).
nah it was the inhouse lampy i think.
they have some sort of turbosound rig in there, not very good though.
-------------------- Live Sound and Studio Engineer
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feline1
active member
Joined: 23/06/03
Posts: 3651
Loc: Brighton, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Nathan]
#577589 - 07/02/08 11:59 AM
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Quote Nathan:
find an electrician
friend to measure your gears leakage current feline -most PAT testing gear will do this
-see if you have some borderline equipment or if you have any congealed beer in any of
your socket strips...
nah, the time it tripped, there
was spilt beer about an inch deep all over the stage and the 4-ways, so "go figure", etc
etc...
-------------------- ~~~ A weasel hath not such a deal of spleen as you are tossed with! www.feline1.co.uk ~~~
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Nathan
Joined: 13/09/04
Posts: 1872
Loc: lincolnshire government experi...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: feline1]
#577590 - 07/02/08 12:01 PM
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heh, no argument
-------------------- planet nine
lincoln, uk.
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chris...
active member
Joined: 12/03/03
Posts: 4152
Loc: Glasgow
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Nathan]
#577887 - 08/02/08 01:07 AM
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Quote Nathan:
also any venue
needs an annual electrical inpection to get their PEL, so it would be good to ask for a
copy of the report for this "council-run" venue -i think as a council they are obliged to
supply one to a formal request
Yep - with very few exceptions, under Freedom of
Information they are required to supply any document held by the public authority.
The request for information must be somehow written down (email considered fine)
but technically doesn't have to be in any way "formal".
You don't have to
live in bristol - anyone should be able to email: foi at bristol.gov.uk and ask for a
copy of the report....
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#577962 - 08/02/08 10:16 AM
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As this is a topic that comes up regularly, and is 'mission critical' I have made it a
sticky as suggested.
hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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The muso
Joined: 11/12/07
Posts: 131
Loc: Scotland
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Hugh Robjohns]
#577963 - 08/02/08 10:19 AM
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Quote Hugh Robjohns:
As this is a
topic that omes up regularly, and is 'mission critical' I have made it a sticky as
suggested.
hugh
Applause! Righto, is there prize for writing the best definitive Electrical Safety
guide?
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PeteJ
Joined: 13/08/06
Posts: 84
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#577987 - 08/02/08 11:05 AM
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Hi all, At the weekend I was getting small shocks from the main vocal mic (our singer
doesn't play any instruments or have anything plugged into mains). There was no unecessary
phantom power and the problem was only on the main vocal. I was splitting it into 2
channels and using 1 to drive monitors... could it have been something in the desk? Anyone
got any ideas how this can be fixed if i encounter it again? Cheers Pete
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Sylle
Joined: 08/02/08
Posts: 2
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#577991 - 08/02/08 11:14 AM
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Tried to search in this thread about it, but i was surprised to see that noone came with
the suggestion to put a DI between the amp and the guitar to prevent shocks. Of
course you have to plug the DI into the mixer or remotebox on the stage, just to even out
the differences in current between different outlets. But with that done, you won't have
any problem with shocks while grabbing your guitar and singing.
Best regards Sylvester
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mpostor
member
Joined: 04/09/03
Posts: 409
Loc: S.W. London
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Sylle]
#578064 - 08/02/08 01:39 PM
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That won't fix any problems with earthing on the mains sockets, though... You
could still injure/kill yourself. Although, on the bright side, that annoying
hum will have been stopped...
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dmills
Joined: 25/08/06
Posts: 2129
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#578120 - 08/02/08 03:29 PM
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Dodgy socket wiring would be my bet for the shocks from the (non guitarist) vocal mic. Get a simple three lamp socket tester, and use it every time, you will find some amazing
things.
On the subject of guitars, I have one that has had a low value class Y
cap added in series with the lead that connects the bridge to the screen. It has
little effect on the screening, but means that the path to the amp will be too high
impedance to deliver a belt that is likely to be fatal (Cheap insurance, and I commend
this modification to the house).
Not of course that this makes lifting the
safety ground safe, but it does provide some protection against muppetry.
Regards, Dan.
-------------------- Audiophiles use phono leads because they are unbalanced people!
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The muso
Joined: 11/12/07
Posts: 131
Loc: Scotland
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: dmills]
#578133 - 08/02/08 03:54 PM
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Quote dmills:
Not of
course that this makes lifting the safety ground safe, but it does provide some protection
against muppetry.
Regards, Dan.
LOL. Good one. Should be in 'Top Tips'.
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PeteJ
Joined: 13/08/06
Posts: 84
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#578176 - 08/02/08 05:15 PM
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Cheers Dan, I'm not totally sure what you mean by the socket tester.. the only power
she could have been connected to was from FOH.. on it's own feed from the distro... maybe
test that output? I don't get how we didn't encounter the same problem with other (vocal)
mics. Cheers Pete
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: PeteJ]
#578178 - 08/02/08 05:25 PM
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Quote PeteJ:
At the weekend I was
getting small shocks from the main vocal mic (our singer doesn't play any instruments or
have anything plugged into mains).
By small shocks, do you mean static 'zaps' -- short, sharp zaps that are not
continuous -- or do you mean half mains voltage continuous electric shocks?
The former is caused by clothing or flooring, generally and isn't lethal but can be
startling. The latter is potentially lethal...
I'm ubnclear when you say you
got shocks but the singer doesn't play anything. Was the singer getting shocks too?
Quote:
There was no
unecessary phantom power
Phantom power is DC and low voltage, so it's not a factor in this.
Quote:
and the problem was
only on the main vocal.
That is very odd... and quite unlikely if it is real faulty-earth style electric shocks!
But could be possible if it was static shocks.
Quote:
I was splitting it into 2 channels and using 1 to
drive monitors... could it have been something in the desk?
Do you mean two channels of the same desk,
or split to two different desks?
Quote:
Anyone got any ideas how this can be fixed if i encounter it
again?
Check all the mains
earths on all the equipment, mains leads, and distro boards. Check the wall sockets at the
venue before using them. And power eveything via RCDs.
hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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PeteJ
Joined: 13/08/06
Posts: 84
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#578227 - 08/02/08 07:23 PM
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Thanks Hugh... Static shocks I reckon. Sorry about the confusing bits.. I just mix
the band so when I said myself and the singer it was me during soundcheck and her during
the show. Maybe it was floor / clothing related.. I'll check out what she's wearing next
time. Any other ways of minimizing this? Changing cables / stands / mics? The channel
thing was just that I had to mix mons + foh from the same board so I y-split the main
vocal into 2 channels of the same desk - then used one for out-front and one to send to
monitors with different eq. Thanks for your help.. best Pete
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: PeteJ]
#578382 - 09/02/08 10:48 AM
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Quote PeteJ:
Static shocks I
reckon.
Yes, sounds more
likely.
Quote:
I'll
check out what she's wearing next time. Any other ways of minimizing this?
Can't do anything with the mics/stands etc.
They have to be earthed for safety. Best to check your lady singer for static-inducing
underwear before every gig 
hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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The muso
Joined: 11/12/07
Posts: 131
Loc: Scotland
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Hugh Robjohns]
#578391 - 09/02/08 11:19 AM
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Quote Hugh Robjohns:
Best to
check your lady singer for static-inducing underwear before every gig 
hugh
You could always attach
some of those static tails you used to see under the rear bumpers of cars in the 80's.
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hifistud2
Joined: 12/02/06
Posts: 795
Loc: Near Sunderland, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Hugh Robjohns]
#578412 - 09/02/08 12:31 PM
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Quote:
Best to check your lady
singer for static-inducing underwear before every gig
Something I've made a point of for years. Sometimes a visual
check alone is not enough, as you're doubtless well aware. However, no matter how the
check is carried out, I find the best option is to ensure it's removed, and held in safe
keeping pending further investigation.
-------------------- [url=http://www.facebook.com/pages/hifi-studios/117322741632389[/url]
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Grim Audière
Joined: 02/09/04
Posts: 375
Loc: UK and France
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#578498 - 09/02/08 05:06 PM
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The HS executive do a leaflet on electrical safety for entertainers. You can download it
here as PDF file: HSE executive PDF on electrical safety for entertainersNote sure it adds much to the discussion, but it's a useful reminder.
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PeteJ
Joined: 13/08/06
Posts: 84
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#579035 - 11/02/08 10:57 AM
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Thanks all Turns out she had three layers of nylon on under that dress!... hang on...
make that four
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: PeteJ]
#579046 - 11/02/08 11:24 AM
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valentine's day is coming... buy her some silk!  Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Nathan
Joined: 13/09/04
Posts: 1872
Loc: lincolnshire government experi...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Hugh Robjohns]
#579090 - 11/02/08 12:51 PM
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Off Topic, Off Topic ...pheeeeep!
-------------------- planet nine
lincoln, uk.
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hifistud2
Joined: 12/02/06
Posts: 795
Loc: Near Sunderland, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: PeteJ]
#579141 - 11/02/08 02:11 PM
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Yerst... it all needs takihng off...
one layer at a time...
slowly...
video please!!!!
-------------------- [url=http://www.facebook.com/pages/hifi-studios/117322741632389[/url]
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The muso
Joined: 11/12/07
Posts: 131
Loc: Scotland
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Grim Audière]
#579178 - 11/02/08 03:14 PM
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Quote Grim Audière:
The HS
executive do a leaflet on electrical safety for entertainers. You can download it here as
PDF file:
HSE executive PDF on electrical safety for entertainers
Note sure it adds much to the discussion, but it's a useful reminder.
Good man.
Definately ON topic!
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: seablade]
#579186 - 11/02/08 03:28 PM
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Quote seablade:
Quote Matt P:
I know it's been
said a million times before, but surely we can all agree that this topic warrants being
made a sticky.
Yea at this
rate, I gotta agree, something needs to be done to keep this perfectly visible, not sure
if a sticky thread is the right answer or not. Maybe an FAQ section along the lines of
Martin's computer FAQs? Ah well up for the mods/admins to decide not me.
Anyways to answer your other question I bought this kit for basic electrical analysis
that I carry with me.
http://www.lowes.com/lowes/lkn?action=productDetail&productId=205783-7
2068-TK-30&lpage=none
I believe the socket tester in it wil check for a
live/neutral reverse, but I will double check tomorrow. At the moment I need to get some
sleep and don't feel like getting dressed to go out to the car to check.
Seablade
For the record, yes
mine does do a Hot/Neutral Reverse check. Cheap 20 buck kit got me a cheap multimeter, a
socket tester, and voltage detector, not a bad deal to me.
Seablade
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The muso
Joined: 11/12/07
Posts: 131
Loc: Scotland
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#579202 - 11/02/08 04:11 PM
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Dale Campbell
Joined: 10/10/04
Posts: 528
Loc: Cheltenham
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#579320 - 11/02/08 08:29 PM
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I really do love my wireless setup as it puts several feet of air between me and
electrocution
-------------------- Crazy guitar beating - www.myspace.com/dalecampbell
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Dale Campbell]
#579511 - 12/02/08 10:58 AM
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There is something to be said for that...  Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Stewart Newlands
Joined: 27/03/08
Posts: 11
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#596316 - 27/03/08 07:55 PM
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For the new BS7909 code of practice (in draft now) it is recommended that (for small
systems from 13A outlets etc) you check the sockets using at least a socket test device
that includes an Earth loop indicator and you should not use any socket that has an earth
loop above 500 ohms, something like this http://www.martindale-electric.co.uk/sockets.htm#ez150You
should also have an RCD, and you may need to bring this with you as some places still do
not have them fitted. see also the HSE publications: INDG247 - Electrical safety for
entertainers http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg247.pdfand GS50 Electrical
safety at places of entertainment which is is for the venue.
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revbobuk
Joined: 31/12/06
Posts: 4
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Hugh Robjohns]
#598387 - 01/04/08 05:22 PM
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Now (referring to a post up the page a bit, where Hugh seemed to be suggesting that mics
and stands are earthed for safety reasons) that would be a first for me - did you really
mean that mic. stands should/must be earthed? I don't think I've ever seen that. Mics,
yes. But stands? How would you do that?
Edited by revbobuk (01/04/08 05:24 PM)
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: revbobuk]
#598423 - 01/04/08 07:32 PM
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Quote revbobuk:
Hugh seemed to be
suggesting that mics and stands are earthed for safety reasons) that would be a first for
me - did you really mean that mic. stands should/must be earthed? I don't think I've ever
seen that. Mics, yes. But stands? How would you do that?
I didn't mean to suggest that stands should
or must be earthed. The metal body of mics are through the cable screen, obviosuly. Stands
can become earthed because of contact with other earthed metalwork.
Performers
usually get shocked becasue they are holding the guitars strings in one hand (which might
be floating at half mains voltage or worse of the amp is missing it's protective earth),
and then touch the mic (the body of which is earthed through the mic cable and mixer).
hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Stewart Newlands
Joined: 27/03/08
Posts: 11
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#603389 - 13/04/08 12:38 PM
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The venue must test socket outlets as a licence requirement in most cases. This is done
formaly be electrical contractors or competent in house electrictians. If
sockets are not safe don't use them, walk away and if anyone hassels you remind them that
electrical systems have to be safe as a requirement of the Electricity at work regulations
1989 under the HASAW act. The IEE wiring regulations BS7671:2008 which now
include temorary stuff for shows refer you to BS7909, which is being updated and is
available in the 1998 form or as a draft 2008 version. Both BS7671:2008 and the
draft of BS7909:2008 recomend that the socket outlets are tested before use, for saftey
particularly to check that the protective earth is continuious and that the resistence to
ground is low enough to be effective in enableing the effective operating of protective
devices. I would as a minimum invest in a decent socket check plug with an
indication of earth fault loop impedence. More information about these things
can be found at these links: www.hse.gov.uk/electricity/socket1.htmwww.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg247.pdfhttp://www.martindale-electric.co.uk/sockets.htm#ez150I am
going to try to get permission to use section 5 of the proposed BS7909:2008 available as
part of a free or low cost information sheet for lay electrical users.
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Roidster
Joined: 14/04/08
Posts: 5
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Stewart Newlands]
#603975 - 14/04/08 11:11 PM
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well from my personal exprience,as a singer/guitar player i found when getting a
shock from a mic,usually come from a bad ground,due to plugs being in different wall
sockets and man it can hurt sometimes,my easy fix is,put my guitar mixer and
power amp all on the same wall socket,problem fixed but this is really isn't a long
term fix
there is bigger problem with the electrical in the house or
building,some people call it dirty power,and could result in a fire cause by an
electrical problem,meaning the place could burn to the ground and you lose everything and it might be good to have an electrical inspector come in and check everything
out
-------------------- Just a Musician
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wigli
member
Joined: 31/01/04
Posts: 67
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#603980 - 14/04/08 11:36 PM
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Did the venue have three phase power and if so was ALL the audio equipment plugged into
the correct (ie. same ) phase?
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Roidster]
#604009 - 15/04/08 04:54 AM
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Quote Roidster:
well from my
personal exprience,as a singer/guitar player i found when getting a shock from a
mic,usually come from a bad ground,due to plugs being in different wall sockets and
man it can hurt sometimes,my easy fix is,put my guitar mixer and power amp all on the
same wall socket,problem fixed but this is really isn't a long term fix
It is important to note, that if that
socket has a faulty ground, this will not fix the real problem. Good grunds are
important.
Quote:
there is bigger problem with the electrical in the house or building,some people call it
dirty power,and could result in a fire cause by an electrical problem,meaning the
place could burn to the ground and you lose everything and it might be good to have
an electrical inspector come in and check everything out
What most people call "Dirty power" is
actually a bit different. It ranges in definition, but in general it tends to fall into
the category of under or over-voltage power coming from a bad source, or overly taxed
distribution. I have also seen it refer to poorly isolated power, leading to similar
problems as above, for instance an elevator motor starting up causing the sound system to
get an under-voltage as it draws power.
Seablade
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Mattmvb
Joined: 29/03/08
Posts: 49
Loc: Birmingham, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Stewart Newlands]
#604465 - 16/04/08 04:20 AM
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Many thanks for the info and links. This is something that's been on my mind recently,
ever since I got a nasty shock from a standard lamp of all things - although I am very
gratefull that it wasn't anything more than nasty, and that it was me not one of my
customers. It was a lamp we move round quite often, and poor design meant that every time
it got moved it rubbed a little more insulation off the live cable... (I know that's
meandering a bit off topic but bear with me) I run a small independent venue
and regularly have the electrics checked out. However this incident has brought it home to
me that something could go wrong 5 seconds after the electrician walks out of the door,
and he may not be back for 6 months to check it out again. This line was an eye
opener for me: Stewart Newlands
Quote:
If your socket tester cannot display the Earth Fault Loop
Impedance, it should not be used to check whether a socket is adequately earthed and safe
to use.
I guess I'll have to
upgrade to a more expensive tester - the cost is easily justified as you can't put a price
on peoples lives.
Sadly, in my experience, this line isn't right:
Quote Stewart Newlands:
The
venue must test socket outlets as a licence requirement in most cases. This is done
formaly be electrical contractors or competent in house electrictians.
Unfortunatley I've never seen or heard of
this being an actual licence requirement. For example, my own licence has several
conditions pertaining to safety such as all fire routes must be kept clear and spills must
be mopped up imediately, but naff all about electrics. There is a legal obligation that
eveything must be safe, but too many operators look at their licence as being the be all
and end all of their obligations. Also, since the changeover to the new licencing laws,
I've had 2 "taskforce" visits, which basically means that police, licensing, environmental
health and fire officers all turn up together to make sure you're within the letter of the
law, but they've never even looked at the electrics! And I know that's the case in various
friends venues as well.
Quote Stewart
Newlands:
If sockets are not safe don't use them, walk away and if
anyone hassels you remind them that electrical systems have to be safe as a requirement of
the Electricity at work regulations 1989 under the HASAW act.
To be honest I'd recommend going one further
than that and notifying the EHO (Environmental Health Officer) of the situation. There
are a small minority of operators who don't give a damn, but if something goes wrong we
all get tarred with the same brush. 
Remember, YOU may have the chutzpah to walk away and cancel your gig, but there
will be a lot of up'n'coming bands who will happily take that risk for a bit of exposure.
That said, please speak to the management first, it could be a new problem and most of us
are decent folk who really don't want to see a performer get electrocuted on stage!
Rant over!
-------------------- One is too many, two is about right, but three can never, ever, be enough
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Stewart Newlands
Joined: 27/03/08
Posts: 11
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#604971 - 16/04/08 11:27 PM
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You can find more information about Electrical Saftey at www.7909.org.uk which will be listing all sorts of stuff regarding
BS7909:2008 and BS7671:2008 and entertainment. There may be some NVQs in this
area at some point starting with a level 2, but it is some way off just now.
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Roidster
Joined: 14/04/08
Posts: 5
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Mattmvb]
#604998 - 17/04/08 05:28 AM
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Quote Mattmvb:
Many thanks for
the info and links. This is something that's been on my mind recently, ever since I got a
nasty shock from a standard lamp of all things - although I am very gratefull that it
wasn't anything more than nasty, and that it was me not one of my customers. It was a lamp
we move round quite often, and poor design meant that every time it got moved it rubbed a
little more insulation off the live cable... (I know that's meandering a bit off topic but
bear with me)
this guy i
knew,was living in a house,but it wasn't the lamp he was getting shocks from everytime he used any light switch in the house,he would get a nasty shock it had
gotten to a point were he would use a stick to turn on and off the lights,in his house finally they had gotten an electrical inspector in he shut the hydro off at the
pole and told them every electical wire that ran through out the walls floor
and ceiling had to be replaced,before they would hook the power back up he said
to them they were lucky there was never a electrical fire this was an older house
with original wiring,so over time the wires had deteriorated
-------------------- Just a Musician
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jbk
Joined: 28/10/07
Posts: 17
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#612902 - 07/05/08 09:21 AM
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If your under pressure to get your sound-check done you can try sticking a D.I. box
between your guitar and the amp and plug the XLR cable from the D.I. into a stage box.
This should solve the problem on the night and the show can go on.
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Sheriton
Joined: 27/01/03
Posts: 1554
Loc: Leicester, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: jbk]
#613231 - 07/05/08 09:30 PM
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Quote jbk:
If your under pressure
to get your sound-check done you can try sticking a D.I. box between your guitar and the
amp and plug the XLR cable from the D.I. into a stage box.
Um. Not convinced about that. The pass
through output that goes from the DI to the amp doesn't usually offer any isolation so it
won't electrically separate the guitar and (potentially dodgy) amp. Also, most guitar amps
are mic'ed which doesn't present any electrical problems so I can't see why you'd want a
DI feed instead... Personally, if there's dangerous electrics on stage, the gig can
wait until it's sorted. The show doesn't have to go on if it means putting lives at
risk.
-------------------- There's nothing we can't face... Except for bunnies
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jbk
Joined: 28/10/07
Posts: 17
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Sheriton]
#613293 - 08/05/08 06:51 AM
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This is if your getting shocks from the mic because the guitar is not properly grounded.
you ground it with the XLR into the stage box. It's not a channel your going to use , so
it's got nothing to do with the guitar being miced. It works, and always has done. It's
not a permanent and far from ideal solution but as I pointed out the show must go on!
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: jbk]
#613295 - 08/05/08 07:05 AM
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Quote jbk:
...as I pointed out
the show must go on!
It
takes me about 5 minutes to wire a new edison onto a plug over here. The show must go on,
but not at a dangerous cost.
I will admit to being a bit sleep deprived, but at
first glance your solution may work, by providing a path to ground with a lower potential,
but it is addressing the symptom instead of the problem. Add this onto the fact that
removing the shield in an audio cable is not an uncommon occurance to prevent ground loops
in a safer way, and you are left with no path to ground except through the performer.
Fix the problem, not the symptom. Especially when it takes a couple of minutes at
most, and ensures someone's safety.
Seablade
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ef37a
Joined: 29/05/06
Posts: 5623
Loc: northampton uk
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#640827 - 26/07/08 05:12 AM
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Wigi brought the matter up but can I reinforce his statement regarding phases please?
It might be very tempting if you run out of outlets to just run another extension
to another room. There is NO guarantee that the room is on the same phase and thus the
voltage stress on the equipment is greatly increased. Futhermore the earth path resistance
will almost certainly be increased.
In older building that have been "knocked
about" it is even possible that a socket at one end of the room has been "pinched" thru' a
wall from another phase. AFAIK there is no easy, safe, cheap way to test for this so as
Hugh says, run eveything from one outlet or those as close together as possible. You can
pull nearly six kW from a 13A double, enough for any SOUND system surely!
Dave.
-------------------- #They did not listen, they are not listening still...Perhaps they never will?#
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Sheriton
Joined: 27/01/03
Posts: 1554
Loc: Leicester, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ef37a]
#640860 - 26/07/08 10:29 AM
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Quote ef37a:
You can pull nearly
six kW from a 13A double, enough for any SOUND system surely!
No you can't! You're likely to start a fire
if you try. With most twin outlets, the most you can draw is around 20A; they're not
designed to be able to supply 13A from both outlets simultaneously. There are some designs
out there that can do so safely but these are the exception rather than the rule.
-------------------- There's nothing we can't face... Except for bunnies
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ef37a
Joined: 29/05/06
Posts: 5623
Loc: northampton uk
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#640886 - 26/07/08 11:41 AM
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Thank you Sheriton. I was basing my figures on a ring I have just put in using 32A
trips.
Are you saying the OUTLETS will burn, because the cable can surely stand
32A?
Dave.
-------------------- #They did not listen, they are not listening still...Perhaps they never will?#
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Sheriton
Joined: 27/01/03
Posts: 1554
Loc: Leicester, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#640896 - 26/07/08 12:31 PM
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The sockets themselves can overheat as they're not designed to be able to supply that much
current. I believe it's the point where the cables are connected at the back that is the
weakest link.
-------------------- There's nothing we can't face... Except for bunnies
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ef37a
Joined: 29/05/06
Posts: 5623
Loc: northampton uk
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#640908 - 26/07/08 12:58 PM
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Well, I was not suggesting a pair of 3kW heaters!
Shall we meet at a 5kW but
not a continous load? 20A is not 5k I admit at 230V but we always get 240+ here and that
is pretty close.
Our new premises run 250 most of the time and has hit 254 now
and again!
Dave.
-------------------- #They did not listen, they are not listening still...Perhaps they never will?#
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dmills
Joined: 25/08/06
Posts: 2129
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ef37a]
#640918 - 26/07/08 01:18 PM
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On the phase thing, I would note that running systems across multiple phases is actually
NOT a problem (And is done routinely on largish gigs (32A TP+N is a much smaller and
lighter cable then 63A SP)), there is 400 odd volts phase to phase sure, but as a minimum
of 4 faults are required to end up with two bits of exposed metalwork being live to
different phases (Two earth faults and two phase->case faults) this should be a
completely negligible risk if your electrical maintenance regime is even halfways
competent.
The large earth loop that can result from plugging into multiple
locations can cause circulating currents in the screen connections, but as long as nothing
has a pin one problem, and everything is balanced, that rarely causes hum (And if it does,
just fix the gear already).
One thing to watch with ring mains is that you
never know what else is connected to them (Think Ice makers!), but for a general bar gig I
would probably be quite happy to run a PA off one, sound requires remarkably little RMS
current (and it is that, not smallish short term peaks that causes problems). Lighting is
of course another matter.
I would second the advice to get a good socket
tester, and getting the local theatre sparks to PAT your gear for you occasionally is
never a bad thing (Normally costs a few pints). Hell just opening up the plugs and
tightening all the screws once a year goes a long way.
Regards, Dan.
-------------------- Audiophiles use phono leads because they are unbalanced people!
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ef37a
Joined: 29/05/06
Posts: 5623
Loc: northampton uk
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#640921 - 26/07/08 01:31 PM
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Ok Dan,
I take you point about phases. I based my warning on an experience at
a factory where I was a general handyman. The power on one wall in the refrectory failed
one hot afternoon and there were 3 snack chillers in there. I quickly ran in a couple of
mains leads from the testroom outlets about 15mtr away the other side of a breezeblock
wall.
I was roundly castigated the next day by the visiting sparks re phase
dangers. I did think at the time that you would have to be bloody unlucky.....
Dave.
-------------------- #They did not listen, they are not listening still...Perhaps they never will?#
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dmills
Joined: 25/08/06
Posts: 2129
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ef37a]
#640934 - 26/07/08 03:06 PM
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A long time ago there was a requirement in the 'wiring regulations' (BS 7671) to separate
all sockets on different phases by 2M, but that was removed many years ago.
There are however still many site electricians that seem to be wedded to following this
practise to the point of insisting on it.
I just had some 200 channels of
lighting dimmer installed at work we did try to keep it to one phase per bar (not always
successfully) on the grounds that it doesn't hurt and there is an outside chance that it
may help some day, but it is not something to get overly worried about.
I do
however try to keep all the backline on one phase as in my experience this tends to be
where the really dodgy stuff turns up (And the venue often does not have easily applied
control over it).
FWIW My amp racks (and fixed signal processing) are fed from
a three phase supply locally broken down to give the required single phase feeds, are
installed right next to the main dimmer racks (the location was convenient), and the whole
thing is totally silent.
An awful lot of the time you get moans from sound
types about buzz from dimmers it is more a reflection on the sound companies engineering
then it is venue or lighting companies...
Regards, Dan.
-------------------- Audiophiles use phono leads because they are unbalanced people!
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IvanSC
Joined: 08/03/05
Posts: 7760
Loc: UK France & USA depending on t...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#654327 - 08/09/08 07:10 AM
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Just to breathe life into this sticky again, we nearly lost 3 more to electric shock at
the weekend.
Kim Rew, Lee Cave Berry & Ted Koehurst were playing a gig with
a dodgy 3 phase installation & lost all 3 amplifiers, plus Ted got well and truly
zapped. No dead bodies, but how close do you need to get? The worrying thing is
that the amps worked for one set before frying (and predictably in at least one case
shorting to the input jack, which was earthed to the chassis) Ths was not a bad
earth, this was incorrect voltage (440)which makes it even scarier. I don`t have all
the details yet but will try to post once I get in touch with one of them.
RDF`s don`t always get everything folks - especially if you are playing outdoor
events/festivals, it pays to carry a good mains tester as well as your own individual RDF
device. Cheap life insurance.
-------------------- Me? But I`m such a loveable old bugger!
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thatsrightmynameisjo...
Joined: 05/10/08
Posts: 6
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#664077 - 05/10/08 01:10 PM
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Hi, I've just been reading through this thread and despite not understnading anything, it
worries me.
I've had a few gigs where I have been getting painful shocks off
the mic when I touch it to sing (I play guitar and sing).
I don't know anything
about electronics so would anyone be able to explain to me (in simpler terms) what I would
have to do/buy to ensure that both me and my bandmates are safe both at gigs and at
practice?
Thanks very much Adam
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Sheriton
Joined: 27/01/03
Posts: 1554
Loc: Leicester, UK
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The first thing I'd suggest is to get someone electrically competent to have a look at
your guitar amp. The main cause of experiencing a potential difference between your mouth
and the mic is that the earth in the guitar amp isn't doing its job which causes the
guitar strings to float up to 110v. You won't notice this until you touch something
earthed like a microphone. 1st thing to check is inside the mains plug - make sure
the earth wire is well & truly connected to the earth pin.
-------------------- There's nothing we can't face... Except for bunnies
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Paul Soundscape
Joined: 27/06/06
Posts: 722
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#664098 - 05/10/08 02:43 PM
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a socket tester is also a useful tool, check every socket you plug your gear into to
make sure its wired properly and is earthed
-------------------- Live Sound and Studio Engineer
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Statick
Joined: 01/09/04
Posts: 1024
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#664127 - 05/10/08 05:41 PM
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on the second night of our most recent tour, the singer/guitarist got a nasty zap off her
mic during soundcheck. turned out it was the 4-way at fault (the earth lead
had come loose from the plug), but anyway the next day i went and bought a simple £10
mains tester. we used it before every show for the remainder of the tour, and found
several instances of missing earth and live/neutral reversed, but in all cases it was
extension leads that were at fault - the wall sockets themselves were all fine. so the moral is, i guess, test all the extensions as well, especially if it's
venue-owned gear and not your own.
-------------------- Statick Audio
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thatsrightmynameisjo...
Joined: 05/10/08
Posts: 6
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#664183 - 05/10/08 08:12 PM
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Thanks for the advice, I've got a couple of mates who are sparkies so I'll get one of them
over to check my gear out. Can someone link me to a good socket tester that will test
for everything and is easy to use?
I tried google but I don't really know what
to look for..
Cheers
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Sheriton
Joined: 27/01/03
Posts: 1554
Loc: Leicester, UK
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This one should be a good starting point.
-------------------- There's nothing we can't face... Except for bunnies
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thatsrightmynameisjo...
Joined: 05/10/08
Posts: 6
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#664214 - 05/10/08 09:45 PM
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Cheers mate
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Mattmvb
Joined: 29/03/08
Posts: 49
Loc: Birmingham, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#664235 - 05/10/08 10:37 PM
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Thanks to this thread I've altered my weekly routine. Previously I'd always test my
emergency lights and fire alarm on a tuesday morning; I've now added socket testing to
this list.
I've come up with a theory that may or may not be right, but if it
is completely wrong it can't do me any harm anyway. Basically, I reckon that terminal
screws in plugs and sockets in locations that are subjected to high sound levels must be
more likely to work loose over time because of the vibrations - you can also add in the
vibrations from the footfall of a couple of hundred excited people - and of course the
body fall of a couple of excited drunk people...
Please keep the safety advice
coming.
Cheers,
Matt
-------------------- One is too many, two is about right, but three can never, ever, be enough
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Nathan
Joined: 13/09/04
Posts: 1872
Loc: lincolnshire government experi...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Mattmvb]
#665127 - 08/10/08 04:48 AM
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Mattmvb,
more relevant is the usage: being regularly plugged/unplugged, thrown
into boxes/flightcases amd transported in vehicles with all the resultant periods of
vibration. This handling will affect virtually any screw termination after a period of
time -something that normal office mains extensions will not have to endure.
I
seal mains screw terminals with a blob of nail-varnish to combat this (my original
background is in electrical engineering and instrumentation and calibration adjustment
trims are always sealed in this manner after any change); this seems to prevent loosening.
I also check the earth integrity of my cable very regularly (the most
important electrical connection) and I visually check all my mains cables every time they
are unpacked for a gig and repacked at the end of the night Cables are a rig's weakest
link and safety and reputation are of paramount importance to any PA company.
get a mains tester and check your extension leads as you plug-in during set-up. buy a
beer for an electrician mate and get him to check all your cables once a year...
-------------------- planet nine
lincoln, uk.
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Mattmvb
Joined: 29/03/08
Posts: 49
Loc: Birmingham, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Nathan]
#665783 - 10/10/08 12:24 AM
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Quote Nathan:
Mattmvb,
I seal mains screw terminals with a blob of nail-varnish to combat this (my original
background is in electrical engineering and instrumentation and calibration adjustment
trims are always sealed in this manner after any change); this seems to prevent loosening.
Thanks for the
tip Nathan.
I've also learnt another lesson the hard way. To cut a long story
short I'm off to B&Q in the morning to buy some shatterproof plugs and 4-way adaptors.
Fortunately nobody came to any harm but it was quite worrying to see a guitarist lose his
balance whilst setting up, tread on a plug and watch half of it break off!
With
regard to the cable testing, I'm fortunate to be located next door to a large theatre so
no worries there - although my mains voltage can be a bit variable when they've got a big
show on!
Thanks,
Matt
-------------------- One is too many, two is about right, but three can never, ever, be enough
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Sheriton
Joined: 27/01/03
Posts: 1554
Loc: Leicester, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Mattmvb]
#665819 - 10/10/08 08:29 AM
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Quote Mattmvb:
To cut a long
story short I'm off to B&Q in the morning to buy some shatterproof plugs and 4-way
adaptors.
Rubber plugs &
sockets are your friend. They cost more, but can take far more abuse.
-------------------- There's nothing we can't face... Except for bunnies
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Nathan
Joined: 13/09/04
Posts: 1872
Loc: lincolnshire government experi...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Sheriton]
#666335 - 12/10/08 10:04 AM
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Duraplug and Permaplug are the brands to look for, you can get them both in the larger
B&Qs, but it might do you to buy from Canford as boxes of ten, etc will work out
cheaper.
if you can't find the above brands, look for plugs with
BS1363/A on them as the A means they comply to the more physically
robust spec.
-------------------- planet nine
lincoln, uk.
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Steven Montgomery
Joined: 06/06/06
Posts: 39
Loc: Northern Ireland
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#674267 - 02/11/08 09:53 PM
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You just gotta make sure that the pa and the amp are running of the same circuit. If your
not sure about the wiring of the room buy yourself a proper RCD and plug it into the wall,
and run everything from there. For most small things you should be grand, for bigger stuff
make sure you jump up to 16a or something of the sorts as soon as you come out of the
wall, and a wee distro wouldnt go a miss.
-------------------- Monty
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Eon
Joined: 11/05/09
Posts: 2
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#733859 - 11/05/09 04:41 PM
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I've just started as an house engineer at a rather small club and just last weekend the
guitarist started getting shocks, didn't think it was this big of a deal and will check
all the sockets right away.
But, I've got a question, there is a smoke machine
hooked on the same fuse as the backline and mixer, could this be a factor in shocks? It's
all metal and stands to the side of the stage.
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Eon]
#733866 - 11/05/09 04:54 PM
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Quote Eon:
But, I've got a
question, there is a smoke machine hooked on the same fuse as the backline and mixer,
could this be a factor in shocks? It's all metal and stands to the side of the stage.
Only if the guitarist is
touching it as well.
Seablade
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: seablade]
#733870 - 11/05/09 05:12 PM
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Actually if the guitar amp and fogger are plugged into the same outlet, and that outlet is
not grounded, then yes this could also be a problem.
But the end result is that
it is important for ALL equipment that shipped with a ground connection, be in fact
grounded.
Seablade
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Sheriton
Joined: 27/01/03
Posts: 1554
Loc: Leicester, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#733893 - 11/05/09 07:06 PM
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The last guitar amp that came to one of my venues: I could see it would fail its PAT
before I even got anywhere near it! The guitarist was busy stuffing the mains cable
further in to the plug as the outer insulation had been stripped back far too far and the
strain relief was obviously ineffectual. I opened the plug and found a 13A fuse instead of
the 5A that should have been in there for the size of mains cable. And the earth wire had
been cut. Not worked its way loose but cleanly cut.
I rewired it, did the rest
of the PAT and handed it back to him with an explanation of why it wouldn't kill him
now.
Lessons learnt: be VERY suspicious of guitar amps when it comes to
electrical safety.
-------------------- There's nothing we can't face... Except for bunnies
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Ian Savage
Joined: 16/12/07
Posts: 611
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#733954 - 11/05/09 10:46 PM
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Thanks for all this; I'm usually wireless live but our singer's been getting some nasty
buzzes of late both live and in the rehearsal room. Musy pick up some RCDs and a socket
tester as a matter of urgency.
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Nathan
Joined: 13/09/04
Posts: 1872
Loc: lincolnshire government experi...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Ian Savage]
#751239 - 09/07/09 07:43 AM
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This theme about singers and guitarists getting twitches from mics seems to be a recurring
endemic, so I thought I'd offer some advice.
If you're getting shocks off a mic
then don't just stuff a pop-shield over it, find out what's happening; either the mic is
live or you're greounding yourself on the mic because something else is.
check
that the earth wire is intact and connected in the plug to your PA amps and mixer, your
guitar amps and any mains leads and extension blocks that supply it.
Don't take
any excuses whatsoever from any guitarist who's removed an earth. None. reconnect of f***
off. Funerals are not as fun as gigs, even for Emo bands.
The only time that a
plug with no earth is ok is if the appliance is "double insulated" (class2) and carries
the square-inside-a-square symbol. No symbol and no earth? get someone to look at it
before you use it!
Never use any mains extension that doesn't have an earth
unless it is terminated in a two pin socket (like a lawnmower extension lead, see above
for class2) if it has a 13A three-pin socket, appliances that require an earth could be
plugged in and would not have their necessary earth (you'd be prosecuted if there was an
accident).
If you are getting shocks and you're not sure what's at fault, buy
or borrow a multimeter and put it on the mains (AC) setting -usu 250, 500, 1000V switch;
measure between the mic grille and a water pipe or sink top or earth pin on a 13A socket,
anything more than a couple of volts (high impedance floaty mains-hum pickup) is a problem
and needs investigating. Try it from the bridge or strings of the guitar and see if
there's any voltage. Generally anything above 50Vac will cause you a tingle when you put
your lips on an earthed mic grille. the most common reading if there is a compromised
earth is half normal mains voltage -about 120V. Sort it look at the earth in any mains,
IEC and extension leads.
It's always a good idea to have your own 30mA RCD
plug. Then you know if you touch 240V it will trip and protect you. Press the test button
regularly to make sure it trips when mains is on. Those mains plug testers with three
lights to show whether your earth is there and Live and Neutral are right-way-round are
good too -I check all venue supplies like this.
check your mains and extension
leads every time they come out of or go back into your bag/box. if there is any damage,
wires showing, scuffs, cracks in plugs, etc -sort it. PAT testers do that as the first
part of the test and won't even plug it into their tester if if fails the visual test
(you'll get charged your test fee as a fail, and a retest fee after they've fixed it).
Open up you plugs and make sure the wires are correctly terminated, looks tidy, shows no
sign of overheating, fraying, fuse is correct and the screws are all tight.
If
your gear looks tidy and looked over, most venues will not hassle you for PAT test certs
etc. They will raise eyebrows/refuse use of gear if it looks shot. PAT test once a year is
good practice for safety and hassle-free gigging, but must be supplemented by visual
checks. Look on the HSE website for charts of what to be looking for (HSE think the PAT
sticker movement has gone just a little to far and are quite keen for people to be
educated about appliance safety as an alternative to compulsory testing in many cases)
Remember ggiging can be hard on your electrical gear, safety is paramount and your
gear reliability is your gig reputation -look out for issues before they ruin your show or
hurt someone.
-------------------- planet nine
lincoln, uk.
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eggle5
Joined: 15/10/07
Posts: 52
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Nathan]
#757821 - 27/07/09 11:34 PM
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Quote Nathan:
This theme about
singers and guitarists getting twitches from mics seems to be a recurring endemic, so I
thought I'd offer some advice.
If you're getting shocks off a mic then don't
just stuff a pop-shield over it, find out what's happening; either the mic is live or
you're greounding yourself on the mic because something else is.
check that the
earth wire is intact and connected in the plug to your PA amps and mixer, your guitar amps
and any mains leads and extension blocks that supply it.
Don't take any excuses
whatsoever from any guitarist who's removed an earth. None. reconnect of f*** off.
Funerals are not as fun as gigs, even for Emo bands.
The only time that a plug
with no earth is ok is if the appliance is "double insulated" (class2) and carries the
square-inside-a-square symbol. No symbol and no earth? get someone to look at it before
you use it!
Never use any mains extension that doesn't have an earth unless it
is terminated in a two pin socket (like a lawnmower extension lead, see above for class2)
if it has a 13A three-pin socket, appliances that require an earth could be plugged in and
would not have their necessary earth (you'd be prosecuted if there was an accident).
If you are getting shocks and you're not sure what's at fault, buy or borrow a
multimeter and put it on the mains (AC) setting -usu 250, 500, 1000V switch; measure
between the mic grille and a water pipe or sink top or earth pin on a 13A socket, anything
more than a couple of volts (high impedance floaty mains-hum pickup) is a problem and
needs investigating. Try it from the bridge or strings of the guitar and see if there's
any voltage. Generally anything above 50Vac will cause you a tingle when you put your lips
on an earthed mic grille. the most common reading if there is a compromised earth is half
normal mains voltage -about 120V. Sort it look at the earth in any mains, IEC and
extension leads.
It's always a good idea to have your own 30mA RCD plug. Then
you know if you touch 240V it will trip and protect you. Press the test button regularly
to make sure it trips when mains is on. Those mains plug testers with three lights to show
whether your earth is there and Live and Neutral are right-way-round are good too -I check
all venue supplies like this.
check your mains and extension leads every time
they come out of or go back into your bag/box. if there is any damage, wires showing,
scuffs, cracks in plugs, etc -sort it. PAT testers do that as the first part of the test
and won't even plug it into their tester if if fails the visual test (you'll get charged
your test fee as a fail, and a retest fee after they've fixed it). Open up you plugs and
make sure the wires are correctly terminated, looks tidy, shows no sign of overheating,
fraying, fuse is correct and the screws are all tight.
If your gear looks tidy
and looked over, most venues will not hassle you for PAT test certs etc. They will raise
eyebrows/refuse use of gear if it looks shot. PAT test once a year is good practice for
safety and hassle-free gigging, but must be supplemented by visual checks. Look on the HSE
website for charts of what to be looking for (HSE think the PAT sticker movement has gone
just a little to far and are quite keen for people to be educated about appliance safety
as an alternative to compulsory testing in many cases)
Remember ggiging can be
hard on your electrical gear, safety is paramount and your gear reliability is your gig
reputation -look out for issues before they ruin your show or hurt someone.
Ur comments are well founded &
appreciated and have been copied onto our local music web scenes cos it's an on going
problem that never seems to go away!!!! The number of amps/mixers I've come across on
stage with the earth removed beggars belief. I've stopped bands playing because of this
and refused to do the sound for them. At the end of the day a 5 amp fuse versus an
electrocution - no contest but there are guys out there still doing this - I will not work
with them and tell them at the sound check. Get an RCD from B & Q - it ain't rocket
science & it's a cheaper way to save your life!!!!
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Stewart Newlands
Joined: 27/03/08
Posts: 11
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#759061 - 01/08/09 05:51 PM
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There is lots to read on the 7909 website
A website dedicated to Electrical
safety for Entertainment and related purposes
In particular: Bs7909:2008 The
Code of practice for temporary electrical systems for entertainment and related
purposes
Loads of links and advice on how to use electricity well.
http://www.7909.org.uk
Don't forget if you think a venue is unsafe apply to the local council for a licensing
review asking for a section 182 condition on electrical safety to be added!
Edited by Stewart Newlands (01/08/09 05:54 PM)
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IvanSC
Joined: 08/03/05
Posts: 7760
Loc: UK France & USA depending on t...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#759147 - 02/08/09 07:33 AM
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Was talking to My Mate Ted last night at a party & he told me the story of a recent
near disaster he experienced.
They use a tester etc and normally have no probs
with mains. They were playing an outdoor gig and some clown had mis-wired the three
phase supply so that two phases were hooked up to phase and neutral, givinbg a potential
of 460 volts across the supply.
Ted said his amp had never sounded so good for
the first set, then all of a sudden everything was smoking and he was flopping around like
a beached herring, still holding the offending (lethal) guitar lead. Fortunately the bass
player put his foot on ted`s hand holding the lead and got him off it, but the backline
was fried and poor old Ted was in a bad way for some time after.
And of course
he and a mate have now gone into business making this cool little box that measures the
potential between ALL connections (not just phase and earth and neutral & earth)and
shuts the supply down if anything exceeds 260 volts. So far three PA hire companies
have bought and I suspect he will get a lot of other customers. Around £100, which
is way cheaper than the next available thing at about £400
-------------------- Me? But I`m such a loveable old bugger!
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turbodave
Joined: 25/04/08
Posts: 2104
Loc: derbyshire uk
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#759158 - 02/08/09 09:07 AM
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Hi Ivan, so do I google "My mate Ted.co .uk" or will you spill the beans?Dave
-------------------- My head hurts!
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adamb1026
Joined: 05/10/09
Posts: 60
Loc: Belfast, N.Ireland
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#776231 - 05/10/09 09:54 PM
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This has happened on a number of occasions with our band most recently on Saturday night.
Our lead vocalist was receiving shocks on his microphone. The vocal is the only thing that
goes into the mixer since it was such a small venue and we don't own any bass bins yet. The mixing desk and power amp was plugged into a Surge Protected 4 way adapter
into what looked like a slightly dodgy plug, but we have played there on many occasions
and this was the first time this happened. We then just plugged in the mixer
into the plug and it worked fine. Our gear has been lugged in and out of vans
and cars for nearly 7 years now, with updates and changes of course, so I can see an
aspect of that affecting things, but the mixing desk is usually kept in good nick. Just a few quick questions, because this has been plaguing us for a while, and
myself. 1. Are surge protected 4 way plugs recommended? I have heard rumors
they are not good for powering amps etc. So just to confirm before i go out and buy some
 2. Is using many separate wall sockets the best method to combat electrical
shocks?
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Mike Stranks
active member
Joined: 03/01/03
Posts: 3056
Loc: Oxford, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: adamb1026]
#776313 - 06/10/09 08:44 AM
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Quote adamb1026:
This has
happened on a number of occasions with our band most recently on Saturday night. Our lead
vocalist was receiving shocks on his microphone. The vocal is the only thing that goes
into the mixer since it was such a small venue and we don't own any bass bins yet.
The mixing desk and power amp was plugged into a Surge Protected 4 way adapter
into what looked like a slightly dodgy plug, but we have played there on many occasions
and this was the first time this happened.
We then just plugged in the mixer
into the plug and it worked fine.
Our gear has been lugged in and out of vans
and cars for nearly 7 years now, with updates and changes of course, so I can see an
aspect of that affecting things, but the mixing desk is usually kept in good nick.
Just a few quick questions, because this has been plaguing us for a while, and
myself.
1. Are surge protected 4 way plugs recommended? I have heard rumors
they are not good for powering amps etc. So just to confirm before i go out and buy some

2. Is using many separate wall sockets the best method to combat electrical
shocks?
Surge protection
will not protect against dodgy earths - which is almost certainly what was happening
here.
I suggest you get yourself a socket tester - you can get them from
Maplins - which will let you see if the wiring in the socket is as it should be. Any
problems, then don't use that socket and tell the venue management that they have a
serious problem which needs fixing pronto.
But that's not enough. Always
connect to sockets using an RCD current dumper - widely available from DIY multistores.
And if you have several mains extensions daisy-chaining then put an RCD on each link. RCDs
only cost a few pounds and could save someone's life.
There's no advantage in
connecting to multiple wall sockets as long as you're not overloading one socket. In fact,
using multiple sockets raises the possibilities of introducing ground/earth loops.
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Sheriton
Joined: 27/01/03
Posts: 1554
Loc: Leicester, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: adamb1026]
#776333 - 06/10/09 09:35 AM
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Quote adamb1026:
This has
happened on a number of occasions with our band most recently on Saturday night. Our lead
vocalist was receiving shocks on his microphone. The vocal is the only thing that goes
into the mixer since it was such a small venue and we don't own any bass bins yet.
Does your lead vocalist
play guitar?
The body of the microphone will be connected to the ground /
earth of the mixing desk. If the mic body was at a potential that would cause shocks, it's
likely that the case of the mixer would be at this same potential. Did anybody notice any
tingles when touching the mixer?
In order to get a shock, you have to be
touching two things at different potentials at the same time. The mic is one of those
things; to be fair to it, the mic is usually not the culprit as it is usually at ground
potential.
99% of the time, the problem is with a singing guitarist's amp.
Despite the title of this thread, the mic is very rarely the cause.
-------------------- There's nothing we can't face... Except for bunnies
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adamb1026
Joined: 05/10/09
Posts: 60
Loc: Belfast, N.Ireland
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Sheriton]
#776356 - 06/10/09 10:55 AM
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Quote Sheriton:
Quote adamb1026:
This has
happened on a number of occasions with our band most recently on Saturday night. Our lead
vocalist was receiving shocks on his microphone. The vocal is the only thing that goes
into the mixer since it was such a small venue and we don't own any bass bins yet.
Does your lead vocalist
play guitar?
The body of the microphone will be connected to the ground /
earth of the mixing desk. If the mic body was at a potential that would cause shocks, it's
likely that the case of the mixer would be at this same potential. Did anybody notice any
tingles when touching the mixer?
In order to get a shock, you have to be
touching two things at different potentials at the same time. The mic is one of those
things; to be fair to it, the mic is usually not the culprit as it is usually at ground
potential.
99% of the time, the problem is with a singing guitarist's amp.
Despite the title of this thread, the mic is very rarely the cause.
Thanks Mike, will use your advice
Also, do you have any links to where I could buy a RCD damper? I've just been looking on
maplins and cant seem to find one.
Thanks again
Sorry,
should have been more specific, he was receiving shocks to his lips rather than the
casing. I don't think he received any shocks from the desk.
And yes he does
play guitar . Out of my ignorance, how does his amp become the problem?
Some
of the venues we play really don't accommodate bands well. They just find an empty space
and tell us to setup there. Since the smoking ban has come into our country, in one venue,
we basically play beside the door to where people have to get outside. We used to take the
whole area, but now since we are squeezed to one side, my bass head has almost become a
weapon lol
Edited by adamb1026 (06/10/09 10:56 AM)
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Sheriton
Joined: 27/01/03
Posts: 1554
Loc: Leicester, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: adamb1026]
#776360 - 06/10/09 11:14 AM
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Quote adamb1026:
Also, do
you have any links to where I could buy a RCD damper? I've just been looking on maplins
and cant seem to find one.
Not sure where the word damper came from but it's this kind of
thing that you're after. I can't vouch for that particular model as I've never used one
but any DIY store will sell you an RCD also.
Quote adamb1026:
And yes he does play guitar . Out of my
ignorance, how does his amp become the problem?
A lot of misguided guitarists cut the mains protective earth in
their amp, believing it to be the way to eradicate hum from their rig. Have a read right
through this thread for more details. I know it's long, but it may just save someone's
life. Seriously. Far too many guitarists have been killed through this stupidity. Get all
of your kit PAT tested regularly if you don't already do so. That will show up any
potentially dangerous faults like a lifted earth. And if your guitarist has
disconnected the earth, beat him around the head with the amp until he sees sense. There
is never EVER any reason for doing so. Under any circumstances. EVER.
-------------------- There's nothing we can't face... Except for bunnies
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adamb1026
Joined: 05/10/09
Posts: 60
Loc: Belfast, N.Ireland
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#776367 - 06/10/09 11:24 AM
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I dont think he has cut the earth, but I'll check it out in any case and give him a good
smack if he has.
Thanks very much for all of your help.
Must go
for a walk down to Maplins
Edited by adamb1026 (06/10/09 11:25 AM)
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: adamb1026]
#776418 - 06/10/09 12:59 PM
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Quote adamb1026:
I dont think he
has cut the earth, but I'll check it out in any case and give him a good smack if he
has.
A bad socket can cause a
similar effect. Pretty much if the ground is disconnected ANYWHERE in the power chain,
this NEEDS to be fixed. No exceptions. This is why people are suggesting the socket
tester, as it allows you to quickly and easily see if a socket is good, never assume it
is.
Seablade
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Mike Stranks
active member
Joined: 03/01/03
Posts: 3056
Loc: Oxford, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#776424 - 06/10/09 01:17 PM
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If he's getting shocks to his lips, there's a possibility that it was static electricity!
(NB. That doesn't mean you can ignore all the other stuff we've written!  ) I was once very agressively berated by a singing guitarist when he got a lip-shock. I
knew all the gear was OK, but checked it anyway - no problems found, all earths good.
Eventually I tracked it down to him wearing some synthetic materials and some
synthetic-soled trainers. He was his own little Van der Graff Generator and then earthed
himself through the mic capsule basket and its connections. That's not to take away from
the static shock you get though; it happened to me once and it ain't funny!
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dmills
Joined: 25/08/06
Posts: 2129
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#776568 - 06/10/09 09:13 PM
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Quote:
1. Are surge
protected 4 way plugs recommended? I have heard rumors they are not good for powering amps
etc. So just to confirm before i go out and buy some
Not particularly, at best the protection is
marginal, they often fail silently and they can contaminate the power ground (which really
shouldn't matter, but often does, particularly with unbalanced gear).
They
only do what any competent power supply designer should be doing anyway.
Quote:
2. Is using many
separate wall sockets the best method to combat electrical shocks?
Nope, using a few sockets that you have tested and
know to be correctly wired and earthed, and keeping all your gear in good repair is the
best way to avoid shocks, and RCDs are (while not foolproof) a good way to increase your
chances of surviving one.
A shock should be an indication that something
(several things) has gone badly wrong, and should always be a signal to stop and fault
find then fix whatever the problem is (And then review your maintenance, it should never
have gotten that far).
Sorry, but IMHO a shock is almost always an indication
that someone has screwed up, as it really should require at least 2 faults to cause one.
Regards, Dan.
-------------------- Audiophiles use phono leads because they are unbalanced people!
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adamb1026
Joined: 05/10/09
Posts: 60
Loc: Belfast, N.Ireland
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Mike Stranks]
#777113 - 08/10/09 12:19 PM
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Quote Mike Charles:
If he's
getting shocks to his lips, there's a possibility that it was static electricity! (NB.
That doesn't mean you can ignore all the other stuff we've written! )
lol well it has happened on a
few occasions, so through reading this topic, I can pretty much confirm it is the plugs
, but I
will keep that in mind next time it happens.
Thanks dmills on the advice
especially about surge protectors.
We do have an large amount of gear.
Particularly our lead guitarist has 8 pedals through a Behringer 12 set pedal board, which
I thought was maybe could be a concern for future electric problems. Again excuse my
ignorance if it isn't.
I think I'm going to persuade him and invest in a hard
case for the mixer and power amp after telling him about this and to genuinely keep his
mixer in good nick .
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Nathan
Joined: 13/09/04
Posts: 1872
Loc: lincolnshire government experi...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: adamb1026]
#777579 - 09/10/09 11:30 PM
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if this mic-grille shock has happened multiple times in different venues, it suggests that
the problem might be a fault of your band's gear somewhere (the common factor).
If you have a multimeter, set it to its 250V, 500V or 1000V AC setting and measure
between the mic grille and a radiator or water pipe) If there's more that a couple of
Volts then you could have a mains earth-issue in your PA or mixer supply.
If
that's normal, but measuring between your guitarist's bridge or strings and the
radiator/pipe gives you a reading, then the issue is with the guitar amp or mains
plug/cable supplying it. What you're looking for is voltage on something that should be
earthed.
Post or PM me if you need further help. Nathan.
>
-------------------- planet nine
lincoln, uk.
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adamb1026
Joined: 05/10/09
Posts: 60
Loc: Belfast, N.Ireland
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#778709 - 13/10/09 06:52 PM
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That's great Nathan thanks.
My dad should have a multimeter lying about in the
garage somewhere who is a qualified electrician, so I can tell him about your technique
and he can guide me a bit further as well.
Appreciate the help.
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Nathan
Joined: 13/09/04
Posts: 1872
Loc: lincolnshire government experi...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: adamb1026]
#779694 - 17/10/09 10:36 AM
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establish that there is an issue between bridge and mic grille first by measuring directly
between them, if it reads about 120V approach with caution! This will rule out a static
electricity issue, then measure to each from the water pipe. Bear in mind that this trick
can also dig out problems with installed wiring earths, and also that not all central
heating systems are earthed (although they should be bonded).
I usually find
that its an earth problem in a mains cable leading to the guitar amp, but this method has
traced problems to loose earths in extension leads supplying the PA mixer too.
>
-------------------- planet nine
lincoln, uk.
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Nathan]
#779720 - 17/10/09 11:32 AM
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Yes, you need to be very logical and thorough when trying to track down a potential
satefty earth problem like this.
There are lots of earth interconnections
between the wall socket and the guitar, and every single one has to be good to be safe...
so work through carefully and logically fromt he wall socket.
Start with a
mains plug tester, as recommended above to check the wall socket(s) and do that at every
single venue you use every single time you use it. I lost count years ago of how many tims
I've found duff, unsafe sockets in public venues.
If the socket is safe and
properly earth bonded, then work through all your mains extension boards and extension
cables. The first check -- and one you should do everytime you pack and unpack you gear is
a visual one, looking for cracks, cuts or crushes to the cable or any damage to the plugs
of sockets -- any sign of physical damage requires careful investigation before use.
You can test the extension cables and boards with a multimeter but a quick and
easy way is to use the mains socket tester again by plugging the extension cable of
distribution board into the wall socket and then plugging the tester into each socket on
the board or cable to check they are all okay. It is possible for individual sockets in
extension boards to fail too...
If all the mains distribution stuff tests fine,
then you'll need to move on to the IEC mains cables or the equipment itself if it uses
captive mains leads. This is where you'll need to use a multimeter with a resistance or
continuity mode. Don't plug the IEC leads into the mains -- instead put one probe onto the
large mains plug earth pin and the other into the offset central earth receptacle on the
IEC socket. You should get a reading of zero ohms or 100% continuity.
If it's a
captive cable, then check between the mains plug earth pin and the metalwork on the
equipment -- unless the label has the double-insulated symbol (a box within a box), in
which case you won't get any continuity at all, by design.
Static shocks can be
unsettling but are rarely any real problem and perversly do indicate that the system is
probably properly earthed!
One way to determine whether you have a serious
safety earth problem or just static shocks is to find out if the shock happens constantly
or just briefly now and again.
A safety earth problem will mean that every
single time someone bridges between something properly earthed (usually the mic) and the
faulty part of the system (usually the guitar amp), they will get a shock (or, hopefully,
trip the RCD!) and that the shock continues for as long as they are in contact (or until
the RCD trips).
If it's a static shock, the first time they touch anything
earthed they will discharge themselves and feel the brief moment of shock but thereafter
they won't feel anything while they remain in contact. And if they touch it again a few
moments later they won't feel a second shock either.
Only after they've
shuffled around on the carpet or danced about to recharge their clothes will they build up
their own static potential enough to feel a shock when discharging again through something
earthed.
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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the muppet
Joined: 27/08/04
Posts: 1010
Loc: with my head stuck up my a£se...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Hugh Robjohns]
#796104 - 14/12/09 03:27 PM
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Hugh,
As this topic comes up time and time again, and as a lot of us return to
the same venues, would it be with our rights or the rules of the forum to start "naming
and shaming" the venues that have dodgy supplies and such like.
I've been
touring now for quite some time and there are venues out there that I'm always very
dubious about pluging even my phone charger into, but those where I have even refused to
plug into the heavier mains supplies.
One, which shall for the mean time remain
as Venue X had 2x 32a single ceeforms on each side of the stage, mounted on the floor.
Both were live-neutral reversed and one was so badly damaged that I couldn't even plug my
rack in (we have EMO distro in all our racks which has those handy neon indicators)
When speaking to the in-house electrician about why I wasn't about to plug my gear
in, he said "Everybody uses them, it's ok for them, it can be ok for you!"
This
isn't just a small pub somewhere, this is a major national venue. We shouldn't be taking
this kind of attitude and I refuse to go back and have mentioned it to the relevant
authorities, but I think as most of us know, this can't happen again.
PM me if
you want to chat about how we do this
Cheers
Ben
-------------------- The early bird may catch the worm, but it's the second mouse that gets the cheese!
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: the muppet]
#796132 - 14/12/09 05:31 PM
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I can certainly understand your frustration, Ben, but I think I'll need to take some
advice before allowing a name and shame thread... tempting though it would be.
Leave it with me for a few days please.
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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TheChorltonWheelie
Joined: 22/09/09
Posts: 867
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Mike Stranks]
#796142 - 14/12/09 06:05 PM
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Quote Mike Charles:
If he's
getting shocks to his lips, there's a possibility that it was static electricity! (NB.
I'll tell you now, I am very
susceptible to static - I even have to be careful when I get out the car, by earthing
myself first, and I'm not kidding either. I regularly get shocks from mic's, and all my
kit properly earthed/pat tested (which I did as a result of having read a thread like this
years ago).
Some people are just unlucky.
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the muppet
Joined: 27/08/04
Posts: 1010
Loc: with my head stuck up my a£se...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Hugh Robjohns]
#796190 - 14/12/09 10:46 PM
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Quote Hugh Robjohns:
I can
certainly understand your frustration, Ben, but I think I'll need to take some advice
before allowing a name and shame thread... tempting though it would be.
Leave
it with me for a few days please.
Hugh
Of course!!
I will say that 99% of venues we go to are
spot on and I wouldn't have a word said against them.
I understand it's very
much a case of the venue could be the safest place to plug into but a bands gear is shot
to bits, and vice versa.
It just seems to me that so many legislations are out
there now to stop this sort of thing happening, it happens on such a regular basis.
This may be slightly off topic, but when, in a time when health and safety is
killing our industry, is a lack of health and safety potentially risking our lives?
I'm sorry if I seem to have come across all stroppy about this, but judging by the
number of posts here, it's obviously a major concern
Ben
-------------------- The early bird may catch the worm, but it's the second mouse that gets the cheese!
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: the muppet]
#796195 - 14/12/09 10:59 PM
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Quote the muppet:
As this topic
comes up time and time again, and as a lot of us return to the same venues, would it be
with our rights or the rules of the forum to start "naming and shaming" the venues that
have dodgy supplies and such like.
I've discussed it with Ian, and as you probably suspected, the word is no. It's
just too risky if someone doesn't get their facts straight (accidentally or even
deliberately), or the venue improves and the thread isn't updated. It would leave SOS open
to being sued, and that really wouldn't be a good idea.
So, sorry. But no. I
think the best course of action would simply be to bring any venue with poorly maintained
electrical supplies to the attention of the appropriate regulatory bodies -- the local
council or the HSE.
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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feline1
active member
Joined: 23/06/03
Posts: 3651
Loc: Brighton, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Hugh Robjohns]
#796271 - 15/12/09 11:37 AM
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Quote Hugh Robjohns:
Quote the muppet:
As this topic
comes up time and time again, and as a lot of us return to the same venues, would it be
with our rights or the rules of the forum to start "naming and shaming" the venues that
have dodgy supplies and such like.
I've discussed it with Ian, and as you probably suspected, the word is no. It's
just too risky if someone doesn't get their facts straight (accidentally or even
deliberately), or the venue improves and the thread isn't updated. It would leave SOS open
to being sued, and that really wouldn't be a good idea.
So, sorry. But no. I
think the best course of action would simply be to bring any venue with poorly maintained
electrical supplies to the attention of the appropriate regulatory bodies -- the local
council or the HSE.
Hugh
Indeed - it's not a magazine's job to police electrical safety in the field. It would be about like witnessing an accident and phoning your local newspaper about it
instead of dialling 999 for an ambulance. If someone does report electrical problems
promptly to the local council or HSE, then those bodies should fairly swiftly see that
they are dealt with in any case, so the problem should not exist for very much longer.
-------------------- ~~~ A weasel hath not such a deal of spleen as you are tossed with! www.feline1.co.uk ~~~
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chris...
active member
Joined: 12/03/03
Posts: 4152
Loc: Glasgow
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#800134 - 02/01/10 05:06 PM
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OK, so whilst rehearsing today, bass player experienced mild shock from mic. So we
plugged the socket tester into the "garden" mains extension lead his bass combo
was plugged into. Earth missing. Opened up the extension lead's plug and socket,
expecting to find a loose/damaged earth connection. But no...
It was 2-core
mains cable. Never had an of earth any kind (!)
Is this sort of thing common ? Are all lawnmowers double-insulated, or something ?
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dmills
Joined: 25/08/06
Posts: 2129
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: chris...]
#800150 - 02/01/10 06:20 PM
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Quote Chris Edwards:
It was
2-core mains cable. Never had an of earth any kind (!)  Is
this sort of thing common ? Are all lawnmowers double-insulated, or something ?
Basically, yes!
There are
electrical safety "issues" with taking the earth outside the building due to the way most
domestic supplies in the UK are earthed.
Due to this most garden appliances are
double insulated and most have 2 core cables. I am however shocked (SORRY!) to discover
that an extension cable (presumably with a 13A socket on the end) is being supplied wired
with 2 core.
You do find 2 core cables made for garden use with lawnmower
connectors on them (which are inherently 2 pin), and I hope that lethal extension came
from some numpty modifying such a lead rather then being a commercial product.
When powering outdoor gigs from a building supply which is suspected to be TN-C-S or
(PME) connected (the normal way these days), the safest way to do it is to bring out the
live and neutral and derive a TT supply locally (with an RCD and local earth connection)
or to use an isolating transformer (with local spike) and derive a TN-S supply with your
own transformer.
Both require some thought and some specialist tools to test
and verify for safety, and the issue is largely ignored by a lot of folks, but there is a
right way and a wrong way to do these things.....
Regards, Dan.
-------------------- Audiophiles use phono leads because they are unbalanced people!
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chris...
active member
Joined: 12/03/03
Posts: 4152
Loc: Glasgow
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: dmills]
#800157 - 02/01/10 06:42 PM
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Quote dmills:
most garden
appliances are double insulated and most have 2 core cables.
Ah, right.
Quote:
I am however shocked
(SORRY!) to discover that an extension cable (presumably with a 13A socket on the end) is
being supplied wired with 2 core.
You do find 2 core cables made for garden
use with lawnmower connectors on them (which are inherently 2 pin), and I hope that lethal
extension came from some numpty modifying such a lead rather then being a commercial
product.
I'm not familiar
with this 2-pin lawnmower connector. My own tiny flymo simply has a regular 3-pin mains
plug.
Anyway, back to the extension lead in question. Yes, it had a 13A
3-pin mains plug at one end, and a 3-pin socket on the other. The bass player remembers
buying it from B&Q some years ago - ie. not modified by a numpty...
This experience made me wonder if such extensions (2-core mains cable, with 3-pin
plug/socket) are common in the gardening fraternity - with the understanding they're only
to be used with double-insulated kit.
But I take it you're confirming this
is not the case ?
Ta
PS - incase I wasn't very clear,
this was an indoor rehearsal. The "garden" extension simply came to hand easily.
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dmills
Joined: 25/08/06
Posts: 2129
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: chris...]
#800159 - 02/01/10 06:56 PM
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Quote Chris Edwards:
But I
take it you're confirming this is not the case ?
Indeed, anything with a 13A socket on it
(with very few specialist exceptions (of which an extension lead is never one)), should
have a earth connection.
This is the sort of thing that begets two core cables
for garden use: http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?moduleno=13176
Note
that a two core cable with a 13A PLUG on one end and a female one of these on the other is
totally standard (and safe) as a cable for things like some flymo lawnmowers. What you
should never see is such a cable with a SOCKET on it.
I would suspect someone
of modifying a lawnmower cable, but I suppose anything is possible.
Regards,
Dan.
-------------------- Audiophiles use phono leads because they are unbalanced people!
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chris...
active member
Joined: 12/03/03
Posts: 4152
Loc: Glasgow
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: dmills]
#800166 - 02/01/10 07:13 PM
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Quote dmills:
Indeed, anything
with a 13A socket on it (with very few specialist exceptions (of which an extension lead
is never one)), should have a earth connection.
Right!
Quote:
This is the sort of thing that begets two core cables for garden
use:
http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?moduleno=13176
Note
that a two core cable with a 13A PLUG on one end and a female one of these on the other is
totally standard (and safe) as a cable for things like some flymo lawnmowers.
Yep - makes sense.
Quote:
What you should never
see is such a cable with a SOCKET on it.
Yep - understood.
Quote:
I would suspect someone
of modifying a lawnmower cable, but I suppose anything is possible.
As I said, he has no recollection of
modifying this extension - but I'll check again...
Thanks for your help!
Chris
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adamb1026
Joined: 05/10/09
Posts: 60
Loc: Belfast, N.Ireland
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#803202 - 13/01/10 01:36 PM
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Hey guys, been a while since I've been on here, thought I would keep you
updated. So far so good! No shocks in any venues...yet!  Bought the
Maplin plug tester and found one of my 4 way adapters had no earth!  . Bit red
faced when I saw only two lights Checked the guitarists plugs and the venues,
all of which so far are in good order. Here's hoping it continues  Thanks again guys for all of your help
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plodsmeade
Joined: 03/01/06
Posts: 61
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Hugh Robjohns]
#834561 - 19/05/10 05:19 PM
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Quote Hugh Robjohns:
If one
or other of those mains safety earths becomes high resistance or disconnected, then the
mains input filtering of the amp or mixer will tend to pull everything connected to the
now disconnected earth line up to half mains volts (115V in the UK and Europe).
I'm not sure I fully understand
how the 115V float works, in so far as what's going on in the device?
Is it
something like the voltage is +/- 115V relative to ground only (giving the device the 230V
range in use)?
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Sheriton
Joined: 27/01/03
Posts: 1554
Loc: Leicester, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: plodsmeade]
#834572 - 19/05/10 06:03 PM
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It's usually capacitors connected between the live and neutral and the earth. Without an
earth reference, it'll float up to a point halfway between the L and N terminals i.e.
115v.
You can see the same phenomenon on class II equipment like DVD players
that employ similar filtering. If you measure the potential of the case with respect to a
good earth, it'll be in the region of 115v. It's quite safe to touch as there's no
significant amount of current available to do you any damage. If you connect a lot of
class II equipment together though, you can sometimes feel a bit of a tingle...
-------------------- There's nothing we can't face... Except for bunnies
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: plodsmeade]
#834602 - 19/05/10 08:39 PM
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Quote plodsmeade:
Is it something
like the voltage is +/- 115V relative to ground only (giving the device the 230V range in
use)?
No. That arrangement
would be 'balanced mains' which brings with it a whole host of other issues -- both good
and bad.
In general, single phase mains supplies operated as an unbalanced
system. The neutral is tied to the earth (ground) and the live carries (in Europe) 130V AC
relative to that.
To help get rid of any nasty high frequency rubbish on the
supply lines, it is common practice, as Sheriton says, to employ bypass capacitors between
the live-earth and neutral-earth. That way, any high frequency rubbish gets passed
straight into the earth line and away from the equipment.
However, if the
equipment safety earth is missing because of a miswired plug or other fault, or if it is a
class II (double isulated) device, then what would have been the earthed point of the
capacitor interconnection gets dragged up to half the total voltage across both capacitors
-- 115V in Europe.
Again, as Sheriton says, the size of the capacitors and the
impedance of the supply lines means that no appreciable current is likely to flow..... but
if you have several devices all sitting across the mains, each passing some current, then
there can be sufficient to give a nasty tingle if not a lethal belt.
With
normal mains-earthed equipment, shocks from the metal work are an obvious and definite
indication of a serious fault. With Class II devices, it shouldn't happen, but it can and
it doesn't necesarily indicate a fault... but is certainly annoying.
Thankfully, it is easily fixed by providng a proper safety earth and a lot of equipment
is designed with this option in mind.
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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plodsmeade
Joined: 03/01/06
Posts: 61
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#834798 - 20/05/10 03:49 PM
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thank you both, that seems to make sense.
so the 115V is relative to earth, so
touching anything earthed is likely to cause a shock, such as a radiator or earthed casing
on another unit, not just the mic-mixer-earth?
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Nathan
Joined: 13/09/04
Posts: 1872
Loc: lincolnshire government experi...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: plodsmeade]
#834883 - 20/05/10 09:24 PM
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Quote plodsmeade:
...so the 115V is relative to earth, so touching anything earthed is likely to cause a
shock, such as a radiator or earthed casing on another unit, not just the mic-mixer-earth?
No, as the earth conductor
is not connected to the supply-earth, only things connected to your equipment or metal
casing, guitar bridge, strings, etc will rise to this voltage.
Real problem is
if there is a serious live to casing fauly on your gear while the earth conductor is
compromised -then it's not uncomfortable, it's lethal!
>
-------------------- planet nine
lincoln, uk.
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: plodsmeade]
#834927 - 21/05/10 08:15 AM
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Quote plodsmeade:
so the 115V is
relative to earth
Yes. I
think Nathan may have misunerstood what you meant.
Quote:
so touching anything earthed is likely to cause a
shock, such as a radiator or earthed casing on another unit, not just the mic-mixer-earth?
Yes. Because your body
then forms a circuit between the case which is floating at 115V, real earth, the earthed
neutral at the substation and back to the box.
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Nathan
Joined: 13/09/04
Posts: 1872
Loc: lincolnshire government experi...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Hugh Robjohns]
#835224 - 23/05/10 10:10 AM
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Yes, I agree Hugh, I think I got the wrong end of the stick there...
>
-------------------- planet nine
lincoln, uk.
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Lalala Music
Joined: 26/07/10
Posts: 22
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#848774 - 26/07/10 08:42 AM
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Ahh the electric shock issue! Have had that a couple of times before. I'm a guitarist and
singer for Her Sweet Suicide, and had these shocks a while back. My rig mainly consists of
an unearthed POD Live... so you can already figure out where the shocks are coming from. I
am merely conducting some form of electricity to the mic by touching the guitar, and well,
I'm then getting shocked on my lips. That's one hell of a kiss of death! Solution: Bought an extension cord which had a third earth prong! All good now! Cheers, Patrick
-------------------- Hi my name is Patrick. I run Lalala Music an online music business plan to help musicians create, promote, distribute and perform their music.
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Nathan
Joined: 13/09/04
Posts: 1872
Loc: lincolnshire government experi...
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Lalala Music]
#849270 - 27/07/10 07:24 AM
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I take it that you Pod Live is not double insulated, ie it needs its earth connection.
>
-------------------- planet nine
lincoln, uk.
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damoore
Joined: 05/07/09
Posts: 326
Loc: New Hampshire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Statick]
#856025 - 24/08/10 01:03 AM
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Quote Statick:
so the
moral is, i guess, test all the extensions as well, especially if it's venue-owned gear
and not your own.
Saw this
once in an amusing way. Well, it seems amusing now. Was working late and the cleaners were
vacuuming. A cleaner got in the lift and went upstairs but only half her extension cord
went with her. She got half a flight up and the cord caught on the doors and the lift came
to a shuddering halt. We couldn't get it to go down again so I got the office tool kit and
removed the plug so the cord would slide through the doors and the lift would continue to
the next floor.
After we retrieved the cleaner and the cord I looked at it
intending to reconnect it and thought to check the far end. Turned out the other end was
miswired! No idea if the end I had taken apart had been miswired the same way. At that
point I refused to put it back together. I was kind of spooked - if I had just gone ahead
and connected it up "properly" I would have unwittingly produced a cross-wired extension
cable.
Moral is it does matter that the cable is correctly connected at both
ends. Just having three random wires make the correct connections is not good enough. That
and don't assume the previous guy did it right.
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martin randle
member
Joined: 03/03/00
Posts: 246
Loc: cambridge uk
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#950359 - 30/10/11 09:19 PM
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This same thing happened to me last night (shock off the mic) all the gear we were using
(PA mixer guitar amps keyboards were running off one double socket via extension leads. I
only use the same leads and have never experienced this before - however we have never
played at this venue before. my girlfriend came up with a classically simple
idea and went to my car and came back 2 minutes later with my rubber floor mats. I stood
on these all night and didn't get another shock. I will get a circuit tester
before I play there again. (The Social Club Witchford Ely Cambs UK)
-------------------- http://www.myspace.com/cottonsalamander
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TSH-Tim
Joined: 21/02/11
Posts: 816
Loc: Guildford
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#950363 - 30/10/11 09:37 PM
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Buy yourself a plug tester (£3.50 from CPC)
-------------------- PA Hire Surrey
Lighting Hire Surrey
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: TSH-Tim]
#950446 - 31/10/11 01:20 PM
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Yes -- I would stringly advise NEVER plugging anything into a wall socket until you've
tested it with a simple mains-tester plug. I've come across way too any pubs, clubs and
conference venues with missing earths and L-N reversals.
Also, once you've
tested the socket and you know it is safe, ALWAYS plug the equipment in via RCDs, just to
make absolutely sure!
hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Gary_W
Joined: 18/10/06
Posts: 376
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#993390 - 18/06/12 01:34 PM
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I'd like to thank everyone for the info in this thread - I need to find the culprit of a
tingle here. I've played live twice over the last 3 weeks. At both venues,
I've had shocks to the lips. I play guitar and sing, though in this band I'm not singing
often.... Just as well. It was a mild tingle at venue #1 and sparks, noise and pain at
venue #2..... It was too much to be DC - the culprit felt like a reasonably high
potential difference between my guitar bridge and the microphone. Interesting to read
here about the float up to 115v as this seems to make sense. This was not 'tongue on a 9v
battery' - rather more impressive unless I'm being a complete fairy.... Fortunately our
bass player had one of the mic pop shields of the hair bear bunch variety which provided
ample insulation (no, I am not suggesting this as a solution to my problem before anyone
gets excited but this obviously stopped the issue of sparky lips  ) I will double check it tonight, but I actually tested the earth bonding on my amp a few
weeks back (I had a friend test it to medical grade standards which tested earth bonding,
mains leakage, the works and it's spot on and as an owner of a multimeter I'm no stranger
to keeping myself alive!). I may have swapped mains leads but all of my mains leads are
in good condition so I'll be surprised if it's that. But multimeter from earth to my
guitar bridge will be the first thing I do just to rule out that bit. One
question here - folks are mentioning double insulated equipment potentially having a
potential...... On my pedalboard, I have several pedals run from a 9v power supply - I
can't see how it can be them (if my guitar earth is indeed good as suspected then 9v to
earth is just going to drag the 1700mA supply down isn't it?). I also have a couple of
Carl Martin pedals (a Quattro and a chorus). These have 2 core mains going to them and
are both double insulated. So could it be one of them? Can anyone tell me a
bit more about this double insulated upping the earth potential thing or have I
misunderstood? Obviously I'll test tonight with just amp and guitar and then add the
pedalboard back in. I'm hoping for no issues at my end which leads me to external
problems (venue / pa / extension leads). On the two occasions it happened it
was 2 different venues and 2 different PA's. One thing that was common was a few
extension leads (provided by another band member). So, unless we have 2 dodgy PA's and 2
dodgy venues then the extensions are likely culprits are they not? Thanks Gary
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Gary_W
Joined: 18/10/06
Posts: 376
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#993466 - 18/06/12 07:23 PM
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OK, I've tested my gear out and all appears fine.... I have a good earth to my amplifier
and this continues on to the bridge of my guitar. With the pedal board in, it adds about
2 ohms of resistance (according to my meter whose tollerence is not great). In
short, I have under 3 ohms between my guitar bridge and the house wiring according to the
aforementioned cheapo meter. So it's OK in my opinion but correct me if you disagree  I also tested for AC and DC voltage. Unsurprisingly with a decent earth, there was
none. So if I am properly earthed on the guitar side of things, the
posibilities are:- 1. Broken earth in the extension lead supplying my guitar
kit 2. Broken earth at two different venues (possible but less likely) 3. Broken
earth on two seperate mixers (again less likely) So favourite culprit is option
1 in my opinion - any advance on that? Many thanks Gary
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Gary_W]
#993482 - 18/06/12 08:59 PM
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My vote is for a dodgy mains extension. Best advice if you want to live is (a) never use
someone's else's mains extensions and (b) ALWAYS test every wall socket and mains
extension socket with a pukka mains tester before you use them!
It's
disturbingly common to find wall sockets with dodgy earths, so please do check. But given
the common factor of a mains extension I think you would be well advised to get that
checked pronto!
Regarding the double-insulated pedals, they are grounded
through the guitar amp, which you have proven is properly grounded when plugged into a
decent grounded mains outlet.
To sum up, my advice would be (1) to buy a
simple plug-in mains socket tester and use it on every wall socket and mains extension
every time you rig your gear; (2) invest in a plug-in RCD unit for your gear--it will save
your life should the worst happen with a dodgy earth somewhere; (3) get those mains
extensions tested and repaired as a matte of urgency.
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Gary_W
Joined: 18/10/06
Posts: 376
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#993511 - 19/06/12 07:40 AM
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Thanks Hugh - I really appreciate the advice. I will invest in a socket tester and ensure
I take my own extension lead.
It's clear that my guitar earth is at earth
potential (where it should be) and that my zapping here came from something else - at the
first gig, I was straight into a socket but this time I was using an extension.
Whilst I can avoid my guitar ground floating up by socket tester + own good extension
lead, I can still get in trouble if the mixer has a floaty ground can't I? So we're
talking about the scenario where it really is the mic giving the shock, not the mic being
the decent earth (as seems to mostly be the case here). So unless I become 'band
electrician' I'm still stuffed BECAUSE I've got a good earth on my own kit.....
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Gary_W]
#993524 - 19/06/12 09:05 AM
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Quote Gary_W:
Whilst I can avoid
my guitar ground floating up by socket tester + own good extension lead, I can still get
in trouble if the mixer has a floaty ground can't I? So we're talking about the scenario
where it really is the mic giving the shock, not the mic being the decent earth (as seems
to mostly be the case here). So unless I become 'band electrician' I'm still stuffed
BECAUSE I've got a good earth on my own kit.....
Yes, there are two ways of getting electocuted in this kind of
situation!
The first is where the mic is properly earthed bu the guitar goes
live, and the second is wher the mic goes live but the guitar is earthed. In both cases
your body closes the circuit.
The good news is that unless there is a really
serious fault somewhere, the mic is unlikely to reach full mains voltage. Worst case is
that it might 'float' up to half-mains voltage (115V in the UK) if the PA equipment is
ungrounded, and that would be from a relatively high impednace, so while unpleasant it's
unlikely to be lethal. But it is an extremely unlikely situation in the first place since
all power amps are class 1 devices (afaik) and they would impose a solid safety ground on
the PA system anyway.
The only totally safe solution that protects you
regardless of where the earth goes missing, is to always power your equipment via a good
quality RCD. That way, if some of the mains current from either system ends up going
somewhere it shouldn't via you, it will trup the power before it can do any serious
damage.
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Gary_W
Joined: 18/10/06
Posts: 376
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#993552 - 19/06/12 12:20 PM
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Thanks again, Hugh  With regard to RCD's, it's all very well protecting my equipment
(and I'll ensure I do so) but this still won't protect me from a dodgy mixer (for example)
that has been brought and set up by someone else will it? As my guitar is well grounded,
if my RCD detects current to earth it'll trip out MY RCD. As the offending live part is
the microphone here which is coming from a mixer I'm not better off as that will keep
going and passing me the juice!! It's one of those situations where it's a very
necessary conversation for a guitar player / bassist as you have both hands on a perfect
earth connection. As such, you are at the mercy of other folks equipment / venue wiring
more than most band members. You are in the position of being worse off if your kit IS
perfectly grounded if someone else's is not! I think I need a chat....
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Sheriton
Joined: 27/01/03
Posts: 1554
Loc: Leicester, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Gary_W]
#993558 - 19/06/12 01:07 PM
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Quote Gary_W:
As my guitar is
well grounded, if my RCD detects current to earth it'll trip out MY RCD.
Note quite. Your RCD will only trip if it
detects an imbalance between the live and neutral currents flowing through your own kit;
it doesn't measure current flowing through the earth connection. So it won't trip if
you're getting zapped by someone else's faulty kit. On the plus side, that does give you
an indication of where the stray current is coming from - if your RCD hasn't tripped, it's
probably not coming from your mains supply.
-------------------- There's nothing we can't face... Except for bunnies
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Gary_W]
#993579 - 19/06/12 02:36 PM
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You're right -- if the PA system is live and grounding via your system your RCD won't help
because it won't interrupt the ground -- but it might still trip if it senses an imbalance
of current on the supply.
If you have any doubts about the PA system, look for
the PAT stickers -- ask to see the PAT records. Check if they are running their gear
through RCDs... and if in doubt, be careful not to touch anything metallic!
And
if you do detect anything that you're not happy about, make sure you get those responsible
for the kit to investigate properly.
hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Gary_W
Joined: 18/10/06
Posts: 376
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#993659 - 20/06/12 06:33 AM
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Thank you both - eBay socket tester is in the post and I will be multimetering the rest of
the bands extension leads. Also going to take my DMV to the next venue so as, if anything
daft DOES happen I can get a bit more buy-in from everyone..... If it says there is
voltage it then makes it a lot more believable vs folks thinking I'm wearing nylon
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Jorge
member
Joined: 13/12/03
Posts: 324
Loc: New York, NY
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#993663 - 20/06/12 07:45 AM
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I don't know how common this is, either in the US or UK, but the subject of Reverse
Polarity Bootleg Ground wiring in venues has been discussed on another forum. RPBG is one
possible explanation for electric shocks from mics, and could potentially lead to fatal
shocks.
I know nothing about electrical wiring in the UK, but for US 120 v
three conductor circuits, a Bootleg Ground is when, if no true ground is available, the
outlet neutral is connected to the outlet ground. This in itself is not usually a problem.
Occasionally, however, on top of the Bootleg Ground miswiring, the building neutral is
mistakenly switched with the building hot (Reverse Polarity). When what is thought to be
the building hot and neutral leads are then connected to the outlet hot and neutral leads,
respectively, what actually occurs is that the building hot is connected to the outlet
neutral and the outlet ground (RPBG). This, unlike simple Reverse Polarity, or a simple
Bootleg Ground, can cause the case and ground of devices (eg, mixer chassis, mic, guitar
strings) to be at live potential. Not a problem until a person touches both that and an
actual ground. Then (and this would happen commonly) the person will get a shock,
potentially at high voltage.
The problem is that your simple outlet ground tester
will find most faults but completely misses the RPBG configuration. You need in addition a
noncontact tester that will identify a hot wire without actual metal to metal contact or
access to a true ground. Here is a video that explains a simple procedure to find RPBG
wiring. A noncontact tester could also find a high voltage (>90 volts) hot chassis,
guitar strings, mic cable or mic.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iLk-6pvSlWg&feature=plcp
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Jorge]
#993675 - 20/06/12 08:39 AM
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Quote Jorge:
I don't know how
common this is, either in the US or UK, but the subject of Reverse Polarity Bootleg Ground
wiring in venues has been discussed on another forum.
It's a very scary bodge, but thankfully not likely to happen in
the UK. I have heard of similar situations in other countries though!
The
reason it is so prevalent in the US is because a lot of buildings are fed with what is, in
effect, a balanced 230V mains feed with a centre neutral. Some sockets are then run from
one side and centre neutral (giving the 115V supply), while other sockets are run from the
other side and neutral. Devices that require a lot of power -- like washing machines and
so on -- are often powered from the 240V supply directly.
The centre neutral is
normally bonded to earth at some point to make the 115V supplies 'unbalanced' in the
conventional way, and hence some electricians have been known to indulge in the lazy
practice of using the neutral as a makeshift earth rather than run a proper earth cable to
the mains sockets.
However, if things then get confused elsewhere in the
building it is possible for the live and neutral wiring to end up being reversed,
potentially resulting in equipment cases becoming live relative to a genuine earth (like
the water pipes and CH radiators!).
In the UK, because we only have a 240V
supply in domestic buildings, and because the IEE wiring regulations are so strict, we
can't suffer the RPBG syndrome you describe for the US. It could potentially happen in
buildings with 3-phase supplies, but again, the wiring regulations are so strict that it
just won't happen.
Quote:
The problem is that your simple outlet ground tester will find most faults but
completely misses the RPBG configuration. You need in addition a noncontact tester that
will identify a hot wire without actual metal to metal contact or access to a true
ground.
Yes... it would be a
bit of a worry! For all it's faults, there are many good things about living in the UK!

hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Dave Gate
active member
Joined: 02/02/04
Posts: 1353
Loc: M6/M61/M60/M62/M65
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#993702 - 20/06/12 09:32 AM
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Many years ago, before the UK switched to the European standard for three phase colour
coding (green for Earth, blue for neutral and brown/black/grey for the three lives) I was
working on a show in what had been a reasonably famous venue (no names) where the three
phase mains had to be tailed in by an electrician. Who attached the blue live phase cable
to the neutral, and the black neutral cable to the live phase that should have had the
blue cable.
Oh that was fun when the power went on
-------------------- Gear List: reverse only.
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Jorge
member
Joined: 13/12/03
Posts: 324
Loc: New York, NY
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#993754 - 20/06/12 02:17 PM
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Thank you Hugh for that crystal clear explanation. Yes there are some downsides to the
anti-regulatory ideology and/or poor enforcement of regulations that have become so
prevalent in the US. The good news is no one I know has ever been electrocuted by an RPBG
wiring configuration or anything else. Just to be safe, however, I have just ordered a
noncontact tester and will add that to my wall outlet testing routine in the venues we
play.
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Dave Gate]
#993757 - 20/06/12 02:19 PM
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Quote Dave Gate:
Many years ago,
before the UK switched to the European standard for three phase colour coding (green for
Earth, blue for neutral and brown/black/grey for the three lives) I was working on a show
in what had been a reasonably famous venue (no names) where the three phase mains had to
be tailed in by an electrician. Who attached the blue live phase cable to the neutral,
and the black neutral cable to the live phase that should have had the blue cable.
Oh that was fun when the power went on
Remind me never to touch UK/EU power. In the US the standard is
Green = Ground, White = Neutral, and Red, Blue, Black for the three phases. Would be way
to confusing.
I can't think of any place I have ever run across with hot
swapped to ground and neutral on the hot for the record, scary thoughts there that that
can even exist.
Hugh is correct on the basic wiring for most houses in the US
(Commercial buildings tend to have true 3-phase though). But even in houses a fairly
standard coloring is used, where there is not usually differentiation between phases, but
rather the hot is usually black with neutral white and green ground. For 220v in the US
Red and Black are usually hot and White is still Neutral with Green for Ground.
Seablade
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Dave Gate
active member
Joined: 02/02/04
Posts: 1353
Loc: M6/M61/M60/M62/M65
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#993761 - 20/06/12 03:24 PM
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It used to be very confusing here, which is where the offending electrician went wrong.
Three phase mains had Earth = green, Neutral = black, Red/Blue/Yellow = 3 x live; but
single phase had Earth = green & yellow, Neutral = blue, Live = brown.
This
is one area where we can wholeheartedly thank the EU for imposing a standardisation . . .
-------------------- Gear List: reverse only.
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Dave Gate]
#993859 - 21/06/12 09:21 AM
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Three phase power isn't something I get to play with these days, but when I did it was
red, blue, and yellow and I think if I was presented with brown, black, gey cables today
I'd be scratching my head with them!
The definition of a competent person is
someone who knows when they don't know enough, and stands back to let someone better
trained take over!
hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Dave Gate
active member
Joined: 02/02/04
Posts: 1353
Loc: M6/M61/M60/M62/M65
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#993871 - 21/06/12 09:47 AM
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I was there at the changeover, and had to get my venue's old Red/Blue/Yellow Camlock
outlets and cables converted to Brown/Black/Grey Powerloks. But the new colours make more
sense, as the earth, neutral and first live phase are in line with what you'd find in a
single phase UK mains plug.
-------------------- Gear List: reverse only.
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Dave Gate]
#993906 - 21/06/12 11:08 AM
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I agree it makes sense in the wider construct -- but red, blue and yellow, all being
bright colours, shouted 'live' to me. Brown black and grey are all pretty earthly
colours....
hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Dave Gate
active member
Joined: 02/02/04
Posts: 1353
Loc: M6/M61/M60/M62/M65
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Hugh Robjohns]
#993908 - 21/06/12 11:13 AM
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That sounds like the old UK wiring system (before my time!) where red was live and black
was neutral (can't remember what earth was). You still find that in domestic wiring
behind the sockets and switches, with the earth usually being an unshielded core (which
most sensible people slip a green and yellow sheath over!). If you've ever changed a
socket or a lightswitch you'll know what I mean.
-------------------- Gear List: reverse only.
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Raphbass
Joined: 30/12/06
Posts: 228
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#997166 - 11/07/12 10:58 AM
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On a gig last Saturday, the guitarist plugged into a different socket to the rest of us -
there was what felt like a good 100+ voltsAC between his strings and his mic that was
going into the PA. When he first mentioned it I thought he meant the common little static
"zap" you sometimes get - I didn't realize till I myself touched his strings and the mic
at the same time that it was a serious buzz - I remember from messing about with
transformers as a kid what 120V AC feels like, this was similar.
I got him to
plug into a plugboard on the same wall socket as the rest of us and the problem was
solved. Not sure whether I should have informed the venue that there was an issue between
two earths in different sockets in the same room - or is this normal?
I assume
that for example if they plug in two brass standard lamps or similar, one on each wall
socket, that the guy holding both would be getting a good dose of current and if the two
lamps came into contact there would be a shower of sparks between them.
I've
always assumed that earth is earth is earth - I don't quite get how two earths can be so
many volts apart, unless something's gone terribly wrong with the building's wiring. This
is a posh modern hotel by the way, not a crumbling third-world establishment (and I've
seen a few!).
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Raphbass
Joined: 30/12/06
Posts: 228
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#997170 - 11/07/12 11:08 AM
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PS - re colours - yes, brown seems to me the most earthly of all colours, how that got to
be "live" totally beats me. And given that a common symptom of colour blindness is to
confuse green and brown it seems mental to have the two close together in a mains plug.
What was wrong with red for live?
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Raphbass]
#997177 - 11/07/12 11:18 AM
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Quote Raphbass:
On a gig last
Saturday, the guitarist plugged into a different socket to the rest of us - there was what
felt like a good 100+ voltsAC between his strings and his mic that was going into the PA.
When he first mentioned it I thought he meant the common little static "zap" you sometimes
get - I didn't realize till I myself touched his strings and the mic at the same time that
it was a serious buzz - I remember from messing about with transformers as a kid what 120V
AC feels like, this was similar.
If it was a true shock from incorrect grounding that indicates two things. First
that the socket ground was a much higher impedance than it should be(Bad connection) or
missing(No connection). And that there was likely a fault inside of the guitar amp that
needs to be checked out.
Quote:
I got him to plug into a plugboard on the same wall socket
as the rest of us and the problem was solved. Not sure whether I should have informed the
venue that there was an issue between two earths in different sockets in the same room -
or is this normal?
Yes
they need to be informed.
Quote:
I assume that for example if they plug in two brass
standard lamps or similar, one on each wall socket, that the guy holding both would be
getting a good dose of current and if the two lamps came into contact there would be a
shower of sparks between them.
Not unless there was some VERY bad wiring in the venue, or there is a fault in the
lamp attached to the socket with the bad ground.
Seablade
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Dave Gate
active member
Joined: 02/02/04
Posts: 1353
Loc: M6/M61/M60/M62/M65
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Raphbass]
#997195 - 11/07/12 12:08 PM
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Quote Raphbass:
PS - re colours -
yes, brown seems to me the most earthly of all colours, how that got to be "live" totally
beats me. And given that a common symptom of colour blindness is to confuse green and
brown it seems mental to have the two close together in a mains plug. What was wrong with
red for live?
For domestic
use it's supposed to be green and yellow striped. So, for colour-blind people you have a
dark colour, a light colour and stripes. Not sure how effective it is, though.
-------------------- Gear List: reverse only.
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dmills
Joined: 25/08/06
Posts: 2129
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#997316 - 11/07/12 10:30 PM
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Red/Green/Black was replaced for flexible cables many years ago precisely because of the
problem of red/green colour blindness (Back when appliances commonly came without plugs),
a red/green reverse in the plug would leave the case live, and this was in the days before
RCDs!
This left us with the interestingly odd situation in that single phase
flexible cables were brown/blue/green-yellow, three phase flexible cables were usually
brown/black/grey with a blue neutral and the usual striped earth (EU standard). Fixed installation wiring however was usually red/black/green-yellow for single phase or
red/blue/green-yellow/black(neutral) for three phase (Note that blue means different
things depending on whether the wiring is a flex(Neutral) or installation(Phase)). Note
also that a single phase circuit fed from any phase was usually red/black.....
Anyway all this got harmonised across Europe with the new scheme being brown/blue for
single phase circuits, black/brown/grey + blue neutral for three phase, this is the same
for both fixed install wiring and flexible circuits. It caused some few problems (and a
very few expensive mistakes) when first introduced, but the fact that in a modern install
blue has only one possible meaning (neutral) is on aggregate a net win.
The
only striped wire in common use for mains voltage is the green/yellow one that is only
ever used for earth connections and is two colours precisely so that no matter what colour
vision problems you have it is obvious.
That concludes a short history of UK
wiring.
Regards, Dan.
-------------------- Audiophiles use phono leads because they are unbalanced people!
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Raphbass
Joined: 30/12/06
Posts: 228
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: seablade]
#998192 - 16/07/12 05:28 PM
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Quote seablade:
Quote Raphbass:
On a gig last
Saturday, the guitarist plugged into a different socket to the rest of us - there was what
felt like a good 100+ voltsAC between his strings and his mic that was going into the PA.
When he first mentioned it I thought he meant the common little static "zap" you sometimes
get - I didn't realize till I myself touched his strings and the mic at the same time that
it was a serious buzz - I remember from messing about with transformers as a kid what 120V
AC feels like, this was similar.
If it was a true shock from incorrect grounding that indicates two things. First
that the socket ground was a much higher impedance than it should be(Bad connection) or
missing(No connection). And that there was likely a fault inside of the guitar amp that
needs to be checked out.
Quote:
I got him to plug into a plugboard on the same wall socket
as the rest of us and the problem was solved. Not sure whether I should have informed the
venue that there was an issue between two earths in different sockets in the same room -
or is this normal?
Yes they need to be informed.
Quote:
I assume that for example if they plug in two brass
standard lamps or similar, one on each wall socket, that the guy holding both would be
getting a good dose of current and if the two lamps came into contact there would be a
shower of sparks between them.
Not unless there was some VERY bad wiring in the venue, or
there is a fault in the lamp attached to the socket with the bad ground.
Seablade
Well yes there
was a comedy moment as I looked at his 20yr-old Fender amp and he sort of took umbrage and
said with a dry hint of confrontation "never had a problem before", and he then looked
just as implicatingly (if that's a word!) at my mixer which is less than a year old, and
PAT tested fairly recently... and there we stood for a few seconds in a stalemate. [Cue
soundtrack to "the Good the Bad and the Ugly"]
In retrospect, I feel pretty
pathetic that it didn't occur to me to get out the mains tester I have in my kit.
If there's a fault in the mains of one of the circuits, couldn't it render the
earth live even without a fault in the gear? Haven't thought it through (and unlikely to
bother!) but it seems it can't be a simple reversal of live and neutral as the amp was
working fine, and the rogue voltage was a lot less than mains (about half I reckon).
Anyway I've emailed the venue to suggest they should check what's going on in
their mains sockets.
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Raphbass
Joined: 30/12/06
Posts: 228
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#1000502 - 29/07/12 11:30 PM
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Had a reply from the venue - apparently no fault with their sockets. I'm not going to
bother asking what exactly they tested but will take their word for it. I could maybe get
my stuff tested again or just leave it at that.
The guitarist is a sort
of "rocker" type, very nice guy but exudes the vibe that he won't remain that way if riled
- he insisted on the day that his amp was fine and who am I to suggest otherwise.
So the mystery remains - an AC voltage between two supposed earths, cured by plugging
into the same wall socket. Weird.
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Raphbass]
#1000511 - 30/07/12 01:27 AM
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Quote Raphbass:
Had a reply from
the venue - apparently no fault with their sockets. I'm not going to bother asking what
exactly they tested but will take their word for it. I could maybe get my stuff tested
again or just leave it at that.
The guitarist is a sort of "rocker"
type, very nice guy but exudes the vibe that he won't remain that way if riled - he
insisted on the day that his amp was fine and who am I to suggest otherwise.
So
the mystery remains - an AC voltage between two supposed earths, cured by plugging into
the same wall socket. Weird.
I would strongly suggest if you work with that guitarist again, taking a look at the
ground and making sure it is properly connected all the way through, and making sure you
check the venue wiring yourself if you are ever there again. A 3 prong outlet tester at a
minimum, but doing a full check with a multimeter isn't a bad idea, since you will want
that to ensure ground continuity as well.
Seablade
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Raphbass]
#1000533 - 30/07/12 09:37 AM
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Quote Raphbass:
The guitarist is
a sort of "rocker" type, very nice guy but exudes the vibe that he won't remain that way
if riled - he insisted on the day that his amp was fine and who am I to suggest
otherwise.
Potentially the
bloke that might save his life!
Quote:
So the mystery remains - an AC voltage between two supposed
earths, cured by plugging into the same wall socket. Weird.
Not weird, dangerous, and still in need of
resolution.
hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Raphbass
Joined: 30/12/06
Posts: 228
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#1000651 - 30/07/12 06:44 PM
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Well - there was also the issue that there was no problem when he plugged into the same
circuit as us. If his amp's casing/earth were live it would still be giving us shocks
regardless which circuit it was on.
Sounds like the same issue as the OP -
cured when everybody goes into the same socket. Trouble is, what I didn't mention is we
blew the fuse at the end of one tune - you know, Standard 12/8 Blues Ending no.2 - "da,
da-da, da-da, da-da, da-da .(drum fill) . da, POP!" - only cymbals ringing and an
uncertain sax note hanging on, and of course darkness as the lights went out (LEDS, 100W
total at the most so can't be blamed).
Next time two extensions, even if going
from adjacent sockets.
The operations manager at the venue just said briefly
"no fault was found". I don't know what else I can do, I'm responsible for my gear, he's
responsible for his hotel.
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Raphbass]
#1000688 - 30/07/12 10:45 PM
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Quote Raphbass:
Well - there was
also the issue that there was no problem when he plugged into the same circuit as us. If
his amp's casing/earth were live it would still be giving us shocks regardless which
circuit it was on.
No
it wouldn't. If the ground is correct and the case becomes live due to a fault in the
amp, it drains to ground through the ground wire, not through the person to ground.
NOTE: There are TWO seperate faults in this type of situation. And either without
the other won't show symptoms.
Quote:
The operations manager at the venue just said briefly "no
fault was found". I don't know what else I can do, I'm responsible for my gear, he's
responsible for his hotel.
You are responsible for safety as well in operation of your equipment. If you go back
to the venue you really should consider it your responsibility to make sure that what you
are plugging into is in fact safe. Again a 3 prong tester at a minimum, but a multimeter
to test not only the socket but also the amp and kill two birds with one stone.
Seablade
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Raphbass
Joined: 30/12/06
Posts: 228
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#1000786 - 31/07/12 09:40 AM
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Yes - if I do another gig at that venue, knowing I've had a problem in the past, I would
see it as my responsibility, not to mention self-interest, to check everything including
their sockets.
Meanwhile though, if someone at the venue gets electrocuted and
they look at emails mentioning the issue, my email might be part of the evidence but I
can't imagine they'll come after me as being responsible by negligence.
If you
warn someone there's a frayed brake hose on their car and they say "no it's fine" and
drive off, I doubt very much you could be sued for their subsequent death.
By
the way - what is an acceptable resistance between the AC plug earth and the ground pin at
the end of the mic lead?
I just pulled out a random mic lead and it's about
0.8ohms, but from AC plug through the mixer to mic lead it's around 3ohms. Is this normal?
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Raphbass]
#1000814 - 31/07/12 11:18 AM
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Quote Raphbass:
Meanwhile
though, if someone at the venue gets electrocuted and they look at emails mentioning the
issue, my email might be part of the evidence but I can't imagine they'll come after me as
being responsible by negligence.
If you warn someone there's a frayed brake
hose on their car and they say "no it's fine" and drive off, I doubt very much you could
be sued for their subsequent death.
No in that case you have done what you can I agree. It is not
your responsibility to go in and check everything for them when you are not there so long
as you have notified them. Then it becomes their responsibility to ensure their venue is
safe.
Quote:
By
the way - what is an acceptable resistance between the AC plug earth and the ground pin at
the end of the mic lead?
I just pulled out a random mic lead and it's about
0.8ohms, but from AC plug through the mixer to mic lead it's around 3ohms. Is this normal?
Both of those should be
fine, however it is far more important the resistance between AC ground and the chassis of
the equipment, not the ground of the mic cable. In general both of these will be
connected yes, but it doesn't always happen, and is possible for the ac ground and signal
ground to be connected without either going to the chassis which is still an issue.
Seablade
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Raphbass
Joined: 30/12/06
Posts: 228
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#1000834 - 31/07/12 11:51 AM
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Just wiggling the mains connector in the IEC socket at the back of the mixer has achieved
a reliable 1.2 ohms now, from the AC plug earth to the mic lead and to the casing.
Maybe a bit of switch cleaner on contacts would be in order.
When I next play
with the same guitarist should I check continuity of his AC earth to the guitar bridge?
I'll probably be doing it under a stony scowl!
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Raphbass]
#1000860 - 31/07/12 12:30 PM
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Quote Raphbass:
When I next
play with the same guitarist should I check continuity of his AC earth to the guitar
bridge? I'll probably be doing it under a stony scowl!
AC Earth to the interior chassis of the amp
itself. Remember, the AC earth is there as a safety against a fault of the amp taking the
chassis live, which the electricity will then try to find the nearest path to ground. If
the AC earth is not there, then there is no path to ground and noone gets hurt, until it
is provided through a human being. The most common way this happens is a guitarist that
is plugged into this amp that the chassis is now live on, places his fingers on the
strings of his guitar and then steps up to a microphone connected to a properly grounded
audio system. He has then provided a closed path to ground, through himself, to the audio
system's AC ground, and this is how very bad things happen and guitarists get killed, but
not the only way. Another way I have heard happening is the guitarist has a momentary
contact with a grounded part of the building, for instance a radiator (Metal piping is
usually grounded in buildings) while touching his strings which also completes the
circuit.
Obviously you have to check to an area of the amp that is actually
conductive, so look around the inputs especially for some steel. From what I have heard,
I imagine all of this is part of the standard PAT test that must be done on your side of
the pond on occasion, so I would look at the regulations for that for a good starting
point as well (But hope someone on that side of the pond will come in to clarify, confirm,
or correct me on that point).
Seablade
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Raphbass]
#1000862 - 31/07/12 12:34 PM
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Yes.
And if he scowls ask him whether he values his life or not?
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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dubbmann
active member
Joined: 17/03/04
Posts: 1404
Loc: 3rd stone from the sun.
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#1000936 - 31/07/12 05:15 PM
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hi all, . forgive if this q has been asked before but i don't understand if
microphone shocks are a recurrent issue, why not switch to a wireless (battery powered)
connection between mic and board? if the mic is not connected to an amp physically, it
CAN NOT deliver a shock. break the metal connection, save the singer, it seems to me.
i also wonder if the same effect can be achieved using a wired mic going into
an optical-transducer based compressor. not sure about that one.
anyway,
thoughts?
d
-------------------- "Patsy had the drug tolerance of Keith Richards and the moral rectitude of Brian Jones." - Dr. Walter Bishop, "Fringe"
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: dubbmann]
#1000953 - 31/07/12 06:12 PM
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Quote dubbmann:
why not switch to
a wireless (battery powered) connection between mic and board?
Mainly because wireless mics are (a) a lot
more expensive and need wireless receivers, (b) they are noisier and use companding
systems which can mistrack in some situations and degrade the sound quality noticeably,
and (c) are prone to interference, fading, glitching etc, and (d) licence-free channels
are notoriously unreliable in busy parts of the country, (e) licensed channels add to the
expense.
But if you are prepared to invest in high quality licensed radio mic
systems and spend the effort installing proper RX aerials it is a good solution.
Proper equipment PAT tests and sensible grounding procedures work perfectly well though!

Quote:
i also wonder if
the same effect can be achieved using a wired mic going into an optical-transducer based
compressor. not sure about that one.
No. The attenuating element is a light-dependent resistor, but
the signal isn't optically-coupled or isolated. Grounding issues would remain, I'm
afraid.
H
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: dubbmann]
#1001001 - 31/07/12 10:56 PM
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Quote dubbmann:
hi all, . forgive if this q has been asked before but i don't understand if microphone shocks are
a recurrent issue, why not switch to a wireless (battery powered) connection between mic
and board? if the mic is not connected to an amp physically, it CAN NOT deliver a shock.
break the metal connection, save the singer, it seems to me.
i also wonder if
the same effect can be achieved using a wired mic going into an optical-transducer based
compressor. not sure about that one.
anyway, thoughts?
d
I am surprised Hugh didn't
answer the most obvious thing, because this merely hides a symptom, not solves the
problem. If this happens you still have at least TWO safety failures (A failure in the
amp and the removal of a path to ground) and it is more than possible to kill a guitarist
by more ways than them stepping up to the microphone, it is just that is the most common
symptom of this. As I mentioned above anything they touch that is properly grounded will
injure if not kill them by completing the path to ground through their bodies.
Again FIX THE PROBLEM. Don't hide the symptoms.
Seablade
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Sheriton
Joined: 27/01/03
Posts: 1554
Loc: Leicester, UK
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: seablade]
#1001338 - 02/08/12 11:50 AM
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The title of this thread has been bugging me ever since its inception - as has been
highlighted again and again, the mic is grounded and so is not causing the problem here.
(Alright, in a small minority of cases it's possible that it could be a problem but the
vast majority of cases involve a guitarist being at a high electrical potential because of
a fault somewhere in their equipment and completing the circuit by touching the grounded
mic.) Sorry Dubbmann but I'm right with Seablade here - sort out the underlying problem.
-------------------- There's nothing we can't face... Except for bunnies
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3768
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Sheriton]
#1001352 - 02/08/12 12:46 PM
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Quote Sheriton:
The title of this
thread has been bugging me ever since its inception
When this thread was stickified, it was the second of two
threads on the topic in a short period of time. The first would have been a much better
thread to stickify at the time, but I am happy at least one of them did get stickied.
Yes the title of the thread is misleading, and if a mod cared to modify it I
certainly won't complain, but what I think is good about the title is that it clearly says
the symptom in it, which means many people will see it and recognize it as the problem
before posting another thread on it. However as has been pointed out, the symptoms are
not the cause and that can be confusing unless you read the thread.
In the
end, we should probably type up a single long article on the topic that summarizes all the
basic concepts of how this happens, and see if that can replace this thread as a sticky.
That was people need to read one post instead of an entire thread to understand why the
suggestion above wasn't really a good one(No offense intended). This post by the way is
not one:)
Quote:
...(Alright, in a small minority of cases it's possible that it could be a problem
but the vast majority of cases involve a guitarist being at a high electrical potential
because of a fault somewhere in their equipment and completing the circuit by touching the
grounded mic.)...
I will
also note that it isn't really just guitarists. When I started working full time in
ministry, one of the first things I had to deal with was baptisms and how to mic those up.
Obviously any electrical equipment near water is a touchy subject, but in the not to
recent past before I came on there was a pastor that got electrocuted in the baptism pool
when he reached up and grabbed a microphone to redirect it to him.
The first
response of many people was along the lines of...
"That microphone had
something called phantom power going to it, which when the pastor with his wet hands
reached up to grab the mic, caused it to short circuit through his body, killing him."
As most people that understand how phantom power works would tell you, this is
exceedingly unlikely and would generally require at least two body parts touching the
microphone to even begin to contemplate, but even then is exceedingly unlikely. Much more
likely would be that water gets inside the microphone, shorts out the microphone and
destroys the microphone, long before anyone got injured.
Turns out what had
happened is pretty much exactly what happens with guitarists. An AC ground was not
connected. For guitarists, the reason we often see this is in some cases they will remove
the AC ground to prevent a ground loop from ruining their sound, as often times people
don't understand there are much safer ways to correct a ground loop, (Isolate the AUDIO
ground instead of the AC ground). In the case of the baptismal however it was a much more
basic issue.
Someone had built the water pump/heater at home and had not
properly grounded it. In actuality what was happening was that every time that pastor
stepped into the baptismal pool, they were stepping into an electrified pool of water.
The issue was that electricity never had a path to ground so it did not endanger the
pastor.... until he reached up and grabbed a path to ground, through the microphone into
the properly designed and built sound system.
Let me repeat, in this case,
just like in the case with guitars, the electrified problem already existed, electricity
was going where it shouldn't have gone (The guitar amp, or the baptismal pool). The
danger was that it also didn't have a SAFE path to ground (Water Pump/Heater was not
properly grounded, Ground lead broken off Guitar Amp Plug, Ground Wire missing in Outlet,
etc.) so it took the first path to ground it got, which in both of these cases tends to go
through a human body.
Again there are at least two electrical faults
occurring already in order for this to happen. First is that there is an internal fault
causing the chassis to become electrified, and second is that there was no safe path to
ground remaining that should have existed. At this point even if you could hide the
symptoms, it is not very difficult for the electricity to take a different path to ground
the next time someone touches something else that is grounded and the same result
happens.
Seablade
EDIT:
This is why I WILL
yell at you(Be you a professional or one of my students) if I ever see you use a 'cheater'
plug (3-Wire to 2-Wire). You CAN use them correctly, most people do not. To use them
correctly REQUIRES running a third wire between the cheater plug ground and a safe
building ground. Guess what, you shouldn't EVER remove an AC ground.
And to
be fair, it isn't just pastors or guitarists that cause this. I have literally walked
into a venue while I was touring and been told I had to use cheater plugs on all my
equipment or else I couldn't plug into the venue sound system(I wasn't touring with a
large enough system for the venue at the time). This was by the supposed 'venue
engineer'. Even after explaining, or trying to, what a ground loop was and the safe ways
to address it they were insistent. I then proceeded to take the plugs, and conveniently
'forget' to plug in of my equipment in through the blasted things. Guess what, no ground
loop. But the engineer was an idiot, and that combined with other reasons resulted in
myself as TD and the stage manager calling the production company after the show and
recommending they never go back to that venue again.
Even after the show went
flawlessly with no hum or buzz the supposed 'engineer' still refused to listen to me when
he noticed that his plugs were in a nice pile behind my sound board:)
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Raphbass
Joined: 30/12/06
Posts: 228
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#1001430 - 02/08/12 05:08 PM
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The average person identifies a symptom as a cause - "your mic is giving me
electric shocks, there's something wrong with your mic."
Same as people
will sometimes say "these speakers are making a funny noise". The answer is "well stop
playing then". Sorry, a bit off-topic there!
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dubbmann
active member
Joined: 17/03/04
Posts: 1404
Loc: 3rd stone from the sun.
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#1001462 - 02/08/12 08:54 PM
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hi hugh and seablade,
your responses make complete sense. the fidelity issue
is certainly a factor and, above all, i agree w/t point made by s/b that a wireless
workaround would only hide the problem. i have dealt with floating ground issues before,
and know the sad stories of the gtrists of the pretenders and renaissance who died from
these so i don't take the issue lightly. i was just wondering off the top of my head
about a wireless solution/workaround. seems it would but that wouldn't protect the band
or the crew, just the singer. and i don't sing, so that hardly matters ;-)
it
would be great if SoS published a one page "how to" on using a volt-meter to check out a
venue's power "rectitude" (DC power joke inserted here) but it might be academic to most
bands due to the constraints of playing live ("ya wanna play or dontcha?"). i had a house
that had a floating ground problem, probably due to a settling water-pipe that had been
used to ground the circuit and the connection had broken, and it was a nightmare. i blew
up some good gear there =:-O
d
-------------------- "Patsy had the drug tolerance of Keith Richards and the moral rectitude of Brian Jones." - Dr. Walter Bishop, "Fringe"
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dubbmann
active member
Joined: 17/03/04
Posts: 1404
Loc: 3rd stone from the sun.
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: seablade]
#1001463 - 02/08/12 08:58 PM
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Quote seablade:
This
is why I WILL yell at you(Be you a professional or one of my students) if I ever see you
use a 'cheater' plug (3-Wire to 2-Wire). You CAN use them correctly, most people do not.
To use them correctly REQUIRES running a third wire between the cheater plug ground and a
safe building ground. Guess what, you shouldn't EVER remove an AC ground.
And
to be fair, it isn't just pastors or guitarists that cause this. I have literally walked
into a venue while I was touring and been told I had to use cheater plugs on all my
equipment or else I couldn't plug into the venue sound system(I wasn't touring with a
large enough system for the venue at the time). This was by the supposed 'venue
engineer'. Even after explaining, or trying to, what a ground loop was and the safe ways
to address it they were insistent. I then proceeded to take the plugs, and conveniently
'forget' to plug in of my equipment in through the blasted things. Guess what, no ground
loop. But the engineer was an idiot, and that combined with other reasons resulted in
myself as TD and the stage manager calling the production company after the show and
recommending they never go back to that venue again.
Even after the show went
flawlessly with no hum or buzz the supposed 'engineer' still refused to listen to me when
he noticed that his plugs were in a nice pile behind my sound board:)
seablade,
+1. in my circles,
"cheater plugs" are called "widow-makers" (a hat-tip to the late, great, oh-so-missed
robert calvert on that one) for obvious reasons.
d
-------------------- "Patsy had the drug tolerance of Keith Richards and the moral rectitude of Brian Jones." - Dr. Walter Bishop, "Fringe"
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CS70
Joined: 26/11/12
Posts: 93
Loc: Oslo, Norway
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Hugh Robjohns]
#1041655 - 06/04/13 08:59 AM
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Quote Hugh Robjohns:
If you're lucky it will just tingle unpleasantly. If you're unlucky there'll be a
bang and the gig will come to a premature end... as will the person who formed the link in
the circuit.
Best
piece of advice ever. Just read your piece at http://www.performing-musician.com/pm/nov07/articles/techspe..., great
stuff.
Thanks!
Edited by Hugh Robjohns (06/04/13 11:15 AM)
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JonSSH
Joined: 19/07/10
Posts: 44
Loc: Yorkshire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#1043303 - 14/04/13 01:52 PM
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static shocks are very unpleasant and can give you quite a fright. BBC TV centre is famous
for them and doing "later with Jools' it could often be a problem. However they are a
discharge.. they will dissipate and once you have had a shock you will not get one
straight away again until you have built up a charge... Repeating shocks are a
voltage/fault problem. I always meter between mic and guitar strings... I also
always try the mic with the back of my hand. If there is a large voltage present your hand
will form a fist and instead of grabbing the mic it will be forced away potentially saving
your life...
Please people learn about power and don't take risks... don't take
off mains earth leads! Buy a meter! Look at yourt plugs every now and again... check that
the leads are secure inside...
Buy a Martindale mains tester and leave it in a
socket of your plug board always...
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witzendoz
Joined: 09/04/13
Posts: 3
Loc: Fremantle Australia
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#1045589 - 29/04/13 07:12 AM
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Sorry if this has been mentioned, but I only zapped (excuse the pun) through the 5 pages.
One way you can get a shock between the mic and holding a guitar is if the PA
system is plugged into one phase of a 3 phase supply and the guitar amp is plugged into a
different phase of the 3 phase supply. This is because due to different loadings across
the 3 phases there is sometimes a voltage differential. The volts you get hit with is
unlikely to be the full 250 volts (thank goodness) but may be up to 50 volts which when
hitting the lips feels like 1000 volts.
The PA and stage amps should be
plugged into the same phase, then they should run the lighting rig from a different phase.
This problem is hard to trace due to different nights / times of day, having a closer or
wider voltage differential. The voltage differential also causes noise in the audio witch
if often mistaken for a ground loop.
Alan.
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dmills
Joined: 25/08/06
Posts: 2129
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#1045984 - 30/04/13 07:59 PM
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Sorry but that is complete bullshit in almost all ways, if you do not understand three
phase power (and you clearly do not), please do not repeat myths about it. They do
nothing to enhance safety and are counter productive as they cause people to worry about
unimportant things (which phase) as opposed to critical things (is all the metalwork
bonded).
Three phase power is routine on stages bigger then the one down the
local pub, and many amp racks of the bigger sort are built with three phase inputs, so
tell me how is a rack full of amps wired to a three phase input supposed to be run off
single phase? I do normally try to keep all the backline on the same phase just
because I have a power distribution chain for the back of the stage that is single phase,
but if it ends up on two or even all three phases, it is not something I loose sleep over.
The one case where it can make a slight difference is where you have class II
appliances on different phases as the touch current if getting between them can be
slightly higher then normal, not generally a problem, and class II with no earth path is
not that common on stage anyway.
99+% of the time complaints about hum due to
lighting are really comments that the sound guy does not know how to design a rig with
acceptable noise immunity or is doing something daft, do it right and your rig will not
hum even if you are on the same phases as the lighting and in fact even if your dimmers
are parked right next to the amp racks. Most non trivial lighting by the way is three
phase input to the dimmer racks, as it is difficult to get much more then 125A as a single
phase supply.
Seriously there are enough weird myths about power distribution
in this game without adding to them, and safety mythology does nobody any favors.
Regards, Dan.
-------------------- Audiophiles use phono leads because they are unbalanced people!
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18355
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: dmills]
#1046001 - 30/04/13 09:05 PM
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Er... Yes! Well said Dan. Either Australia is a very scary place with a radically
engineered three-phase system utterly at odds with the rest of the planet... Or our new
friend is a tad confused!
H
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Bass Growler
Joined: 21/04/13
Posts: 11
Loc: Highlands of Scotland
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#1046631 - 04/05/13 08:04 PM
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What a fascinating thread! I'm a complete newbie as regards audio and completely out of my
depth in this forum. As a newbie I'm taking the advice of all the folk who are replying to
the threads for audio newbies - and I'm slowly learning about some of the basics.
Can I please appeal to all you audiophiles! Please pay the same respect to those who
understand about AC power and its dangers and peculiarities when connected to
sophisticated equipment. Modern electrical kit has within its circuitry Safety Ground
(Frame Ground) and many others. Logic Ground for electronic component circuits, Signal
Ground for the Data path (Analogue or Digital) and I could go on. This is a complex
subject. Many many electricians are connvinced that Ground is Earth and Earth is Ground so
what does it matter - they all join up eventually!!! ------Wrong!! Just as I
will never know as much as recording engineers about recording - and as a result leave it
to them for serious stuff - like recording our choir when it really matters, please hand
over issues about electric shocks to folk who know their subject to a high level. I've
been climbing up that learning curve for over 40 years and it includes attending more
than one funeral, alas. I don't want to get morbid - but please don't hand
these issues over to the chap who knows how to wire a mains plug, and gets it right most
of the time. This is serious stuff - and if I can lighten the issue - it has the potential
to do significant damage to more than equipment. In the UK get a Martindale Tester to
check all the outlets you use - if one fails - get help. Get all your kit PAT tested with
a suitable tester - boring - yes - but the alternative is really shocking.
-------------------- I used to be indecisive, but now I'm not so sure!
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dmills
Joined: 25/08/06
Posts: 2129
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: Bass Growler]
#1046646 - 04/05/13 09:39 PM
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Quote Bass Growler:
Modern
electrical kit has within its circuitry Safety Ground (Frame Ground) and many others.
Which is usually the only one
that matters from a safety perspective. All the others are merely functional not safety
connections and so are not really a concern to the user (Particularly as they usually all
come together inside the equipment anyway, "Technical earth" connections are not popular
in live sound).
Quote:
Many many electricians are connvinced that Ground is Earth and Earth is Ground so what
does it matter - they all join up eventually!!! ------Wrong!!
Not really from the point of view of an
electrician as opposed to an electronics engineer, what matters is the frame ground, and
as long as that has a low enough Ze to make the disconnect time and keep the touch voltage
reasonable that is really all that matters. Sure you get some old kit that separates
the functional earth and frame ground connections to support the old 'clean earth' thing,
but that does not really work in this age of mobile phones simply because the inductance
is way too high. Of course you also get kit that gets the screen connections horribly
wrong, and hums like a bad singer, for which the answer is either a fat PEC or to
telescope the audio cable screens (NEVER disconnect the frame ground).
Quote:
In the UK get a
Martindale Tester to check all the outlets you use - if one fails - get help. Get all your
kit PAT tested with a suitable tester - boring - yes - but the alternative is really
shocking.
Also, get plug in
RCDs and use them, they are a bit good at making most shocks merely painful rather then
lethal. I am a bit in two minds about the PAT thing for hobbyist musos mostly
because IME a good visual inspection catches almost everything that the test box would,
and that can and should be done every time the gear comes out, PAT is a bit like the MOT
in that it only catches problems present when it is done, getting in the habit of
inspecting for damaged cables and cord grips will catch most things as they happen.
I think however that for the most part we are in loud agreement!
My
standard recommendation for papers by Walderon, Muncy, Whitlock and Ott goes here.....
Regards, Dan.
-------------------- Audiophiles use phono leads because they are unbalanced people!
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ef37a
Joined: 29/05/06
Posts: 5623
Loc: northampton uk
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#1046663 - 05/05/13 06:07 AM
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"Also, get plug in RCDs and use them"
You can also get RCDs that can be
hardwired into dis'boards and socket strips and so cannot be forgotten.
Dave.
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Bass Growler
Joined: 21/04/13
Posts: 11
Loc: Highlands of Scotland
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Re: Well, yeah, again, electric shocks from mics !!
[Re: ghc]
#1046691 - 05/05/13 01:34 PM
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Very happy with Dan and Dave's input. My comments regarding logic and Signal earths have
been relevant in the past when equipment faults caused very unusual links between the
differents earths. To be fair, RCD has come to the aid of us all - before that, open
circuit neutrals in particular have caused chaos, and the solution often tricky to sort
out. Cheers Bass Growler
-------------------- I used to be indecisive, but now I'm not so sure!
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