Safety Ground Q


I never really understood grounding until I watched the ASR video, assuming the information is correct, of course. Amir says the safety ground does absolutely nothing unless there is a fault in which the case becomes electrified and the safety ground would kick in. I think I got that right, but maybe not.  OK, so if the safety ground is doing nothing, why can lifting it eliminate a ground hum?  It seems the safety ground would have to be doing something other than waiting for a short if eliminating it reduces hum. Thanks. 

chayro

Amir says the safety ground does absolutely nothing unless there is a fault in which the case becomes electrified and the safety ground would kick in.

That is correct, kind of. The reason a safety ground is required, and can’t be smaller than the power conductors is the need to carry 100% of a shorting current. That is, if your equipment has a 10A fuse or breaker, the safety ground must be able to carry that current amount safely, but if all is well that current should not flow. However, the construction of a metal chassis which is grounded is rather like a Faraday cage so we expect that RF noise should be greatly reduced vs. a plastic enclosure.

The use of cheater plugs to lift the safety ground becomes a problem when a short happens. The 10A of current, or higher now has to travel 24gauge ground wires in the signal cables, potentially causing a fire or minor explosion or both.  If a wire melts fast enough it basically evaporates with a bang.

The problem is how equipment makers connect a signal ground to it, and the center tap of a transformer secondary. In an ideal case there would be no metal to metal path between a signal ground and the chassis, or when used, would not carry from component to component.

Even digital devices can have ground loops as a result of non-isolated coaxial or USB inputs.

The best cases are the use of XLR connectors which allow the lifting of ground on one end or the other, eliminating the loop itself.

chayro

... if the safety ground is doing nothing, why can lifting it eliminate a ground hum?

Because in an unbalanced system, it's usually tied to the neutral. Hence, two paths to ground.