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This topic comprises 2 pages: 1 2
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Topic: shocking platter
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Jack Ondracek
Film God
Posts: 2348
From: Port Orchard, WA, USA
Registered: Oct 2002
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posted 09-29-2003 02:10 PM
Phillip, there's something inherently wrong with the situation as you describe it. If the grounding from point A to point B is connected properly, there's no way you can be measuring that kind of voltage between the same points. Something is not hooked up right. As an electrical engineer, you know you should be able to touch pretty much any two metallic items within your reach without risk... assuming proper grounding has been accomplished.
Further, the voltages in a platter are relatively stable within 10 seconds or so after the projector starts up & the platters reach their operating speeds & stabilize, so the idea that it would take two minutes... or even one to build up the kind of voltage you describe sounds bizarre.
As far as I know, there are no caps in these platters... certainly not in the orange tree versions I have, which makes the idea of any kind of "build up" seem impossible.
So.... more info?? What are the points you're measuring this voltage between?... the platter & a power raceway?... the motor and the tree??... what? Are you actually watching this voltage build up on a meter of some kind?
When you get the chance, unplug the platter & measure the resistance between the ground plug and the platter (at various points). Assuming the ground connection is reaching the platter at all, maybe you can find some part that might be floating. At least you'd have a point to start from.
There is one spot that I could conceive a shock risk might occur. If you have those vacuum cleaner motors on your platter, make sure the front plate of the motor housing (the part with the switch) hasn't worked loose & is floating. There's a lot of stuff crammed in behind that plate... and the switch contacts & ceramic resistor pins are very close. The diode is mounted to the plate itself, so there is a direct connection that might be a potential problem if the screws holding that plate work themselves out & the plate loses direct contact with the rest of the motor housing.
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Philip Wittlief
Film Handler
Posts: 57
From: Chicago, IL
Registered: May 2003
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posted 09-29-2003 03:07 PM
Jack said "If the grounding from point A to point B is connected properly, there's no way you can be measuring that kind of voltage between the same points. Something is not hooked up right."
I know, that's my point. And now I'm trying to figure out what is not hooked up right.
My estimate of 1 or 2 minutes may be off a little bit, but its not a consistant thing. Today, when I turned everything on, there was already 80V on the platter. Before I threaded up about 30 minutes later, the voltage was only a couple volts (was looking on a scope and didn't take an exact measurement)
I'm measuring with a DMM and a scope the voltage between the casing of the platter and the metal box of the outlet, which is properly grounded. So I know that where the chasis is supposed to be connected to ground, it is not. But I don't know where that connection is on these platters or if there's multiple connections. Or what is putting the voltage on there since it is loose. It would seem to me that its more than just a ground wire that's loose, because something would have to take all that energy to bring it back to ground. Unless its a voltage that's being induced onto the chassis which then I suppose the ground would keep that from happening.
The platter won't be in use for 2 hours later today, I'll take resistance measurements and look to see if I see anything else suspicious.
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