I’ve wondered about that. Makes me paranoid I’m one faulty-grounded building away from becoming the ground but with wireless, the most that can go through me is 3 volts.I could go preaching again that the usual grounded strings to abuse the guitarist as a shield is life-threatening nonsense![]()
I’ve wondered about that. Makes me paranoid I’m one faulty-grounded building away from becoming the ground but with wireless, the most that can go through me is 3 volts.
Yeah, wireless helps.
I'm not just concerned about buildings without 3-prog outlet, I am concerned about broken amps that have a problem tell mass/ground and one of the 115V hot wires apart after a defect in a cable or the chassis.
Oh boy. I swear I’ve heard a horror story or two of that nature.
I’ve forgotten so much of my small electrics course. Let me get this right. The guitar wiring “ground” is always soldered the bridge. Does that mean it’s going (or could go) through you to ground? That would be the past of least resistance and if I know electricity, it really wants to go to ground.
No, it doesn't go through you. It just abuses your belly as a shield for the otherwise unshielded back of the electronics cavity. That shield (you) works even if you have rubber boots on.
In the rubber boots you would be outright killed by the grounded strings when the amp screws up. It would wait until you touch real ground such as a microphone.
Sorry had a typo. In the rubber boot you wouldn't be outright zapped (until you touch the mic).
The nice thing about these zaps is that you muscles in general and left hand in particular cramp up, and that usually means around the guitar neck![]()
Spoke too soon, it's happening again. At this point I have swapped all power cables and adaptors out for different ones and tested the outlets, so I'm really flummoxed by this.
Only thing I can think of is that possibly it's happening once the tubes in the amp or the mic preamp are warming up, which could be giving the false impression initially that whatever I've done has fixed the problem. Could faulty tubes do this?
EDIT - I think this is actually happening mic preamp-side, if I keep the amp on and unplug the power from the preamp the shocking stops, but if I turn the amp off and leave the preamp on the shocking continues. It also takes about 30 seconds for the shocking to start after the MIC500USB is powered on, regardless of how long the amp has been turned on.
Fixed it. I mean, actually fixed it this time. It was the cheap ****ty power supply that came with the MIC500USB, which has no earth pin. I thought I'd tried a different one but apparently not. Replace it with a good quality one with an earth pin - no shocks. Go back to the original - non-contact voltage tester goes nuts. Rinse and repeat.
The model is TCHELICON ADS-12AE-12 12012E if anyone wants to avoid it like the plague.