[Amps] Question about safety ground connection

Keith Dutson kdutson at sbcglobal.net
Sun Nov 13 17:38:35 EST 2005


Bill,

As you have noted, the standard 240V plug does not bring the safety ground
to your chassis.  However, you can wire the 240V circuit with safety ground
(4th wire) and run a separate ground wire from the outlet to your chassis.
I have never seen this done, however.

The neutral wire begins at the transformer outside (center tap) and is
grounded there by the power company.  The breaker panel has a ground rod
just below and should connect to neutral.  The safety ground is an
independent ground.  It SHOULD be at the same potential as neutral.  The
main difference is the safety ground wire has no relationship to the hot
wires, so current cannot flow from the transformer.  The neutral wire
current should also be zero but could provide a path for current should the
two 120V phases not draw equal amounts of current.  This is an abnormal
condition.

73 Keith NM5G

-----Original Message-----
From: amps-bounces at contesting.com [mailto:amps-bounces at contesting.com] On
Behalf Of Bill Turner
Sent: Sunday, November 13, 2005 12:35 PM
To: amps at contesting.com
Subject: [Amps] Question about safety ground connection

I have a question about how to connect the safety ground from the AC mains.

I'm building a 1500 watt amplifier with a separate power supply. The power
supply will connect to a 120-0-120 wall socket. My question is whether the
"0" pin is considered a safety ground pin or a neutral pin. If it's neutral,
then do I have to run a separate safety ground wire back to the AC mains
entrance? Conversely, if it's a safety ground pin, am I allowed to connect a
120 volt load (blower motor) from it to one of the 120 wires? I suspect not,
so does this mean the 120 volt load will need its own separate 120v circuit
(with its own ground), and is it ok to connect the two grounds together?

Comments appreciated.

73, Bill W6WRT

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