williewonka OP
1,719 posts 08-20-2018 8:26am
I think I did not explain myself properly...
- I did not make any changes the bonding points of the neutral and ground in the breaker panel.
- I simply took a wire from the "neutral side" of the inputs on the amp and grounded it to the ground point on the power bar in my audio rack
Yes, I did understand you.
You connected the neutral conductor to the equipment ground/equipment grounding conductor at the power bar at the audio rack.
The neutral conductor is a current carrying conductor. In the case of a two wire circuit the neutral conductor (The Grounded Conductor) will carry the same amount of current as the HOT (The Ungrounded Conductor). If there is a 5 amp connected load on the Hot conductor there will be 5 amps on the neutral conductor.
When you connected the neutral conductor to the equipment ground you provided a parallel path for the current to return to the source, the electrical panel. You made the equipment ground/equipment grounding conductor a current carrying conductor. That can dangerous...... If the equipment grounding conductor is of the same wire gauge and made from the same metal then it will theoretically carry half the current in the circuit as the neutral conductor did before you connected the neutral to it. So if using 5 amps as an example, when you connected the neutral conductor to the equipment ground/equipment grounding conductor there was 2 1/2 amps on each of the two conductors.
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