Cheater Plugs OK with GFCI? - Home Theater Systems - Electronics and Forum - HomeTheaterShack
 
SVSound: The Sound Authority in speaker and subwoofers!  The new PB13-Ultra and PC-Ultra subwoofers are astonishingly awesome!
Ultimate Home Entertainment: Providing home theater seating and accessories such as popcorn machines and signage... at very affordable prices!
Parts Express: The #1 Internet source for all your DIY and electronics needs!
Axiom Home Theaters: Award winning Internet direct speakers and subwoofers!
Creative Sound Solutions: Loudspeaker kits and components for subwoofers, midwoofers, woofers and full range speakers!
Mach 5 Audio: Affordable Drivers: Australian supplier of car and home audio subwoofer drivers of exceptional value!
Fi Audio: Infinitely amazing balanced high end musicality designed drivers!
SoundSplinter: A purveyor of exceptionally high quality subwoofers with a price tag that isn't heavier than their subs!
DiyProjectorKits: Come check us out to finish off your home theater with a great priced DIY Projector! Your one stop DIY projector shop, we have it all!
Ascend Acoustics: Award-Winning Audiophile Quality Loudspeakers Made Affordable Via Direct Sales!
Funky Waves: A great source for custom subwoofers and speakers at incredibly low prices!
HomeTheaterReview.com: Home theater equipment review publication that features av preamp, receiver, speaker, blu-ray player and more reviews.
RAM Electronics: Audio, Video, Home Theater and Computer Cables.
GIK Acoustics: Home audio acoustics at its best... especially when you have help from the owners right here at the Shack!  Check out their very affordable acoustic panels!
Discount Merchant:  If you need a replacement bulb for your video device... look no further... save big!
Musicians Friend: Find products for your REW and BFD setup... microphones, mic amps, Galaxy CM-140 SPL meter and more!


    Home Register               Shack Shopping Glossary         Forum Help/FAQ            
Go Back   Home Theater Systems - Electronics and Forum - HomeTheaterShack > Subwoofer Equalization | Calibration > BFD Forum
Room EQ WizardBFD Guide
Forgot Password?
    Home Theater Links Donations         Image Gallery        

BFD Forum

Cheater Plugs OK with GFCI?

Discuss Cheater Plugs OK with GFCI? in the Subwoofer Equalization | Calibration forum; Cheater Plugs OK with GFCI? Hi Guys: From what I know, a GFCI works in a similar way to a circuit breaker on a grounded ...


 Reply     Post New Thread
 
Thread Tools
Old 11-01-06, 10:07 AM   #1 (Link)
 
Shackster
Alias: Pete
User: #2485
Since: Sep 2006
Posts: 86
PeteD is offline
Cheater Plugs OK with GFCI?


Hi Guys:

From what I know, a GFCI works in a similar way to a circuit breaker on a grounded outlet. It senses a voltage imbalance (short) as small as few milliamps between the hot and neutral and trips in 1/30 of a second. Does this afford the same protection as a grounded outlet? I have temporarily inserted one on the plug of my BFD (which is plugged into a GFCI) and it did eliminate my hum. The link below provides some details.

http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/question117.htm

Additional interesting info that makes sense:
"For many years, audio equipment was manufactured with two wire plugs as
well, up to the early 90's, in some cases. The manner of construction of
most of this equipment is identical to equipment specified for three wire
safety ground operation. Internally, there is no difference at all in the
safety considerations of the transformers for these devices. Since the early
90's, all this two-wire equipment has had polarized plugs. There is a reason
for this. One is that it is desirable that the on-off switch must break the
hot side of the circuit. The other is to take advantage of the fact that one
of the two prongs on the power cord is actually at ground potential. When a
transformer is wound, one terminus of the winding is at the iron core. The
other is on the outside. When the inner winding termination is connected to
neutral, this provides protection against a transformer short. Even if the
inside of winding shorts to the frame, which is extremely unlikely, it will
not elevate the potential of the amplifier chassis above neutral, which is
actually at ground potential." (http://www.gatago.com/rec/audio/opinion/3731827.html)

Finally, look at your lamps, etc that are still two prong. I don't think there is any more of a chance of audio equipment shorting than these other household items. Either way, you still get 120V.

I do not want to take risks so feel free to tell me if I am missing something.

Thanks,
Pete


Last edited by PeteD; 11-01-06 at 12:05 PM.

Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Alt Advertisement
Old 11-01-06, 01:25 PM   #2 (Link)
 
Shack Administrator
Platinum Supporter
Alias: brucek
User: #6
Since: Apr 2006
Posts: 4,974
brucek is offline
Re: Cheater Plugs OK with GFCI?


Quote:
It senses a voltage imbalance (short) as small as few milliamps between the hot and neutral and trips in 1/30 of a second. Does this afford the same protection as a grounded outlet?
No........Safer - yes....

You are using a GFI in an ungrounded condition. It is safer than a normal receptacle used in an ungrounded (cheated) condition.

When a normal outlet is wired properly, and a three wire device is plugged into it, the metal case of the device is now attached directly to your house safety ground system. If a short occurs internally in the device and the case becomes live, then the breaker for that circuit will immediately trip indicating the fault. If you have the third safety wire cheated or removed and this happens, the live metal case will likely electocute you before the breaker will trip. The 120 volts will travel through you if you touch a ground. That's obviously bad news.

What happens when you use an ungrounded GFI? Well, when a fault occurs in the device, the case again becomes live. There is no "difference" in the loads at the GFI so it doesn't trip yet. When you touch the live case, the hot current now exceeds the neutral current and the GFI trips. See the small problem you still have. You don't get electrocuted, but you get a shock. How bad a shock is determined by the speed of the GFI.

You're safer - not safe.........better than simply using the cheater

Quote:
Finally, look at your lamps, etc that are still two prong. I don't think there is any more of a chance of audio equipment shorting than these other household items.
Nonsense....

brucek


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 11-01-06, 01:40 PM   #3 (Link)
 
Shackster
Alias: Pete
User: #2485
Since: Sep 2006
Posts: 86
PeteD is offline
Re: Cheater Plugs OK with GFCI?


I appreciate your conservatism on this issue. However, my last receiver (a Sony from the early 90s that I replaced last year) was 2-prong.

I disagree with you regarding the lamp, considering how cheap they are and the fact that the lamp cord is often threaded through a metal shaft with no grommets to protect the wiring from getting cut. Even blow dryers are pretty cheaply made compared to most audio equipment, in my opinion.

It seems that if we rely on GFCI outlet to protect us while blowdrying in the bathroom, we should be OK with the BFD, especially since people use a blowdryer everyday and I will probably touch my BFD once every couple of months.

That said, I understand that the safest recommendation is appropriate on your part.

Somewhat related question: I have a pro-sound amp with a ground lift switch. Same danger as a cheater plug (I assume)?


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 11-01-06, 02:51 PM   #4 (Link)
 
Shack Administrator
Platinum Supporter
Alias: brucek
User: #6
Since: Apr 2006
Posts: 4,974
brucek is offline
Re: Cheater Plugs OK with GFCI?


Any device that is sold with a two prong polarized plug is double insulated to prevent shock. A three prong device does not enjoy this double insulation, but rather has the advantage of a grounded outer case that connects to the safety cold conductor of a three prong plug. (the latter being the condition that is over-ridden with a cheater). A hair dryer is a double insulated device. The GFI plugs in bathrooms are not to protect against failed hairdryers. They're provided for accidents such as dropping the hair dryer in the bathtub......

Audio equipment is particularly susceptible to a 'hot case' condition since it employs multi small capacitive components connected directly from hot to case for RF bypass. In general, it's the probability that the DC ground will become hot from a possible failure of any number of components that enhances the odds of a live case. This is because the DC ground in electronic equipment is connected directly to the AC ground except for those that are double insulated or enjoy a "ground lift" capability.

Quote:
I have a pro-sound amp with a ground lift switch. Same danger as a cheater plug (I assume)?
Absolutely not. The outer case of equipment with a ground lift is always connected directly to safety ground. The ground lift simply inserts a small resistance between DC ground and AC ground. This changes the potential between AC and DC ground and inhibits ground loop current, but still allows a breaker to blow in the event of a short. Seems simple, but the entire DC ground has to be isolated from AC ground before this feature can be offered. It's quite an expense for the manufacturer to accomplish this....

brucek


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 11-01-06, 03:12 PM   #5 (Link)
 
Shackster
Alias: Pete
User: #2485
Since: Sep 2006
Posts: 86
PeteD is offline
Re: Cheater Plugs OK with GFCI?


"A hair dryer is a double insulated device. The GFI plugs in bathrooms are not to protect against failed hairdryers. They're provided for accidents such as dropping the hair dryer in the bathtub......"

I realize that. I was just thinking if it affords safety in that situation (small shock), hopefully it will do they same for audio equipment...

"Audio equipment is particularly susceptible to a 'hot case' condition since it employs multi small capacitive components connected directly from hot to case for RF bypass. In general, it's the probability that the DC ground will become hot from a possible failure of any number of components that enhances the odds of a live case. This is because the DC ground in electronic equipment is connected directly to the AC ground except for those that are double insulated or enjoy a "ground lift" capability."

Makes sense. I suppose the stored electricity in the capacitors are gonna get you even with a GFCI, if they short to the case.

"Absolutely not. The outer case of equipment with a ground lift is always connected directly to safety ground. The ground lift simply inserts a small resistance between DC ground and AC ground. This changes the potential between AC and DC ground and inhibits ground loop current, but still allows a breaker to blow in the event of a short. Seems simple, but the entire DC ground has to be isolated from AC ground before this feature can be offered. It's quite an expense for the manufacturer to accomplish this...."

Very informative...Too bad more manufacturers do not incorporate this, but if it is expensive that is the reality. I suppose if I read the "new BFD proposal" thread again, the ground lift switch would be included in that proposal...

Thanks for the information, it reminds me of my mandatory EE class in college (I went CE). Circuits never really interested me until I owned a home and got into home theater...


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 11-01-06, 10:08 PM   #6 (Link)
 
Shackster
Alias: Pete
User: #2485
Since: Sep 2006
Posts: 86
PeteD is offline
Re: Cheater Plugs OK with GFCI?


Quote:
brucek wrote: View Post
The outer case of equipment with a ground lift is always connected directly to safety ground.
Given this situation, can I ground my BFD case to my amp case and avoid ground loop, while keeping a safe ground?


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 11-02-06, 06:54 AM   #7 (Link)
 
Shack Administrator
Platinum Supporter
Alias: brucek
User: #6
Since: Apr 2006
Posts: 4,974
brucek is offline
Re: Cheater Plugs OK with GFCI?


Quote:
Given this situation, can I ground my BFD case to my amp case and avoid ground loop, while keeping a safe ground?
Yes, and there is some justification to that scenario (star grounding), but often more than not that doesn't work to eliminate the ground loop. If the small voltage differential that is causing the ground loop originated at the amplifiers safety conductor, then it would work.

Realize that the outer case of your BFD is already connected to the amplifier case and every other case in your system by means of the interconnects and as long as they're kept connected, the BFD is connected to safety. Relying on connection to other equipment is considered bad form and somewhat dangerous though (unsuspecting person could disconnect the interconnects).

You've covered yourself fairly well though by using a GFI and also by having the BFD connected to grounded components.

brucek


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 11-03-06, 11:21 PM   #8 (Link)
 
Shack Administrator
Platinum Supporter
Alias: Wayne
Loc: Katy, Texas
Wayne A. Pflughaupt's Avatar
User: #8
Since: Apr 2006
Posts: 2,307
Wayne A. Pflughaupt is offline
Re: Cheater Plugs OK with GFCI?


Quote:
I have a pro-sound amp with a ground lift switch. Same danger as a cheater plug (I assume)?
I believe what it does is lift the ground of the balanced audio connection (i.e., pin 1 of an XLR). That could be the same thing that brucek described – I don’t know for sure...

Regards,
Wayne


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 11-06-06, 07:31 PM   #9 (Link)
 
Shackster
Alias: Bones
User: #2727
Since: Sep 2006
Posts: 70
tdamocles is online now
Re: Cheater Plugs OK with GFCI?


Quote:
PeteD wrote: View Post
Hi Guys:

From what I know, a GFCI works in a similar way to a circuit breaker on a grounded outlet. It senses a voltage imbalance (short) as small as few milliamps between the hot and neutral and trips in 1/30 of a second. Does this afford the same protection as a grounded outlet? I have temporarily inserted one on the plug of my BFD (which is plugged into a GFCI) and it did eliminate my hum. The link below provides some details.

http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/question117.htm

Additional interesting info that makes sense:
"For many years, audio equipment was manufactured with two wire plugs as
well, up to the early 90's, in some cases. The manner of construction of
most of this equipment is identical to equipment specified for three wire
safety ground operation. Internally, there is no difference at all in the
safety considerations of the transformers for these devices. Since the early
90's, all this two-wire equipment has had polarized plugs. There is a reason
for this. One is that it is desirable that the on-off switch must break the
hot side of the circuit. The other is to take advantage of the fact that one
of the two prongs on the power cord is actually at ground potential. When a
transformer is wound, one terminus of the winding is at the iron core. The
other is on the outside. When the inner winding termination is connected to
neutral, this provides protection against a transformer short. Even if the
inside of winding shorts to the frame, which is extremely unlikely, it will
not elevate the potential of the amplifier chassis above neutral, which is
actually at ground potential." (http://www.gatago.com/rec/audio/opinion/3731827.html)

Finally, look at your lamps, etc that are still two prong. I don't think there is any more of a chance of audio equipment shorting than these other household items. Either way, you still get 120V.

I do not want to take risks so feel free to tell me if I am missing something.

Thanks,
Pete

I've used this method also until I found that the Comcast cable was causing the hum. A cable isolator solved the problem.


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
 Reply     Post New Thread

« Home Theater Shack > Subwoofer Equalization | Calibration > BFD Forum »

« Previous Thread   Next Thread »

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads, You may not post replies, You may not post attachments and You may not edit your posts.

Bookmarks
Thread Tools





Mach 5 Audio

This site is better viewed with a screen resolution of 1024 X 768 or higher!
1280 x 1024 is preferred for the best viewing!!!


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:19 AM.



Powered by vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2006 - 2008, Home Theater Shack, LLC.
John Mulcahy and Sonnie Parker - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED!

Electronics Retailer   Home Theater HDMI Receivers   HD-DVD   Blu-ray   HomeTheaterReview.com






Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.2.0

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202