B plus Safety Tips
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Do it Yourself
B plus Safety Tips
B+ Safety Tips From datc--(at)--ol.com Sat Dec 27 23:00:28 CST 1997 From: datc--(at)--ol.com (Datc1) Newsgroups: alt.guitar.amps Subject: Re: DEADLY VOLTAGE IN TUBE AMPS Date: 28 Dec 1997 04:55:28 GMT X-Admin: new--(at)--ol.com Xref: geraldo.cc.utexas.edu alt.guitar.amps:77639 Having ingested the best that most great amps have to offer in B+, as well as an alarming tendancy to put both hands into an amp and take it across the chest, I have to say it's best to avoid getting shocked. It does not feel good, and tends to burn parts of the skin. Here's some tips: 1) Don't "sleep" on the chassis. That is, don't lay your hands or arms on the chassis as you look for things. This creates a comfortable situation that can come back to haunt you later when you do this with a live amp and hit some voltage. This is one of my biggest bad habits. 2) It is best to keep one hand off the amp at all times to avoid the possibility of taking a hit across the chest. Your cardiovascular will thank you for your diligence. 3) Do not stand on cement. This is a very good path to ground, especially in humid climates. Use a rubber mat or at least some carpet and sit on a stool. 4) Do not work on an amp bare-footed. Rubber-soled shoes are better than leather. 5) In general avoid being a path to ground. 6) Avoid picking up or moving a chassis while it's powered up. If your'59 Bassman starts to tip over the edge of the bench and you try to catch it, you may just grab 120vac wall current, or you may stand back and see it shatter on the floor. Neither is a welcome situation. 7) Discharge the filter caps through a 1K 1w resistor after you power down before you start to work. 8) WATCH where you are putting your fingers. You may think you are grabbing that clipped out resistor but your knuckle is headed straight for the AC switch. This is another bad habit of mine, especially when I am working fast. 9) If you do take a hit, pull back but don't panic so that you rip your skin on the chassis or kick over the table. Even the sweet kiss from the rails of an SVT will cause little harm if the ground is weak and your reaction swift. 10) Don't let people hang over your shoulder when you work, and don't leave an open chassis on the bench plugged in. Assume that non tech-types know NOTHING about voltage risks. Play safe! Tom From mgarvi--(at)--anix.com Sun Dec 28 11:59:02 CST 1997 From: mgarvi--(at)--anix.com (Mark Garvin) Newsgroups: alt.guitar.amps Subject: Re: DEADLY VOLTAGE IN TUBE AMPS Date: 28 Dec 1997 06:14:25 -0500 Xref: geraldo.cc.utexas.edu alt.guitar.amps:77660 In <19971228095601.EAA0631--(at)--adder01.news.aol.com> jsimons92--(at)--ol.com (JSimons920) writes: >amps (current) is what kills..1 amp will cook your heart if you complete a >circuit.. work with one hand in your back pocket on live circuits, less of a >chance to kill.. >voltage will wake you up, but it won't kill you.. > j. I know that the statement above is paraphrased often, but... Voltage thru resistance makes current. When you touch both B+ and ground, you become the unwitting resistor in a simple Ohm's law equation. In other words, considering that your own skin resistance is relatively constant, voltage will have a very direct bearing on current. Skin resistance *does* vary from one individual to another, and can also be affected by contact with electolytes, subcutaneous contact, etc. (insert electrodes under the top layer of skin for quantum increase in current). This relates to all relatively low-impedance voltage supplies, like tube amps. The place where it does not relate is in static electricity discharge, where there is an inherent limit in source current. Even then, a big enough sheet of charged plastic film has been known to knock people on their butts. There are standards for what constitutes a potentially lethal voltage. Considering the above, the standards are relatively conservative. I believe that in NY, anything above 32 v or so requires inspection/ licensing for use near bathtubs and such. By the way, the figure is in the low milliamps for current thru heart muscle, so the 32 volt figure is understandable. Next time you hold a 9v battery on your tongue, consider whether you'd want to run that kind of current thru your heart. Even lower voltages can be hazardous. Mechanics who get metal bracelets or rings jammed between 12v car battery contacts find that the resulting high current heats the metal to meat-cooking temps quite fast. MGarvin
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