mkarcher wrote on 2021-08-06, 09:55:
In same places of the world (Germany for example), it was common to have neutral (the non-hot power wire) and protective earth (the ground wire that should be connected to the case) on the same conductor in the electrical installation, and have protective earth to ground bridged in the AC socket. In this kind of installation, current spikes on AC (like degaussing, which can cause momentary currents up to 30A in 250V countries, I expect it to be even higher in 120V countries) can pull the combined protective earth/neutral a considerable amount away from actual earth potential.
Thank you very much for the explanation! 🙂
Yes, I think that might be true.
As far as I remember, neutral and protective earth come together in the fuse box at some point also.
The outlets have three different pins (two holes, 2 outer contacts wired together).
One hole has phase (brown), the other one has neutral (blue) and the outer contacts are protective earth (yellow+green).
So if a fully wired plug is used (the bulky schuko type) instead of that flat, 2pin euro connector, the grounding can be done via protective earth.
Back in the 1960s or so, TVs had hot-chassis still due to missing transformers and the use of the old 2pin plugs that lacked protective earth.
As a workaround, people used external isolating transformers with their TV sets sometimes.
These transformers also protected the TVs from voltage peaks and other dangers.
- TVs back then used to be very sensible (Edit: false friend; meant to say sensitive).
The tubes etc. were directly AC powered sometimes.
To my understanding, switching PSUs nowadays have a pseudo galvanic insulation.
They have a 100khz miniature transformer (ferrite ring) that does the insulation.
One side is connected to the control circuit, the other to the output?
Another issue I can think of:
Maybe an high capacity electrolytic capacity has failed in one of the devices' PSU.
If it was a blocking capacitor that was wired against ground, it could explain why such strange things like resets happen.
Without the blocking capacitor, the ground connection of one the devices could have accidently become hot. Anyway, that's likely not "hot enough" to harm people, but it might affect sensitive electronics.
I hope what I wrote was understandable and makes sense anyhow.
I'm struggling a bit with writing proper English at the moment, I'm afraid. 😅
Even Google translator might be doing a better job, I'm afraid. 😂
Edit: The other things you said are also excellent. Above, I simply answered to the block I was referring to, hope you don't mind.
The "power good" circuit in a PC is also an explanation for resets or shut offs, yes.
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