<div dir="auto">Thanks Richie, good advice. I'll let this project wait for another moment. <div dir="auto"><br></div><div dir="auto">Rutger </div></div><div class="gmail_extra"><br><div class="gmail_quote">Op 28 jan. 2017 13:04 schreef "Richie Burnett" <<a href="mailto:rburnett@richieburnett.co.uk">rburnett@richieburnett.co.uk</a>>:<br type="attribution"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
However... I thought, let's check if the recto before it is working correctly. I thought I'd be able to see this with my scope on the waveshape easily, and connected the scope's ground terminal to the circuits local ground (the negative side of C4) and boom! Big explosion! Fried part of my scope's ground clamp...<br>
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Capacitor dropper power supplies are dangerous to work on. Always use a mains isolation transformer when doing this type of repair work. Never be tempted to float the ground connection to the scope, that's how fatalities happen.<br>
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Also... I was expecting this circuit to behave such that the local ground would adapt to any other ground applied to it.<br>
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Yep, don't clip scope probe grounds onto anything that might be mains live. If in doubt probe it with a DVM first.<br>
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And finally.... why would a big (film, not elco!) cap get fried way below it's operating voltage of 400V...<br>
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You most likely exceeded it's peak current rating when you shorted one side of it to ground, resulting in vaporisation of the thin metal foil, or failure of a weak point where the ends of the foil plates are connected to the component lead.<br>
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Or is that a DC voltage rating?<br>
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Will be the max DC voltage rating.<br>
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And finally, why is my flu still not gone! (perhaps that explains it all...wait before repairs until you're recovered?)<br>
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I think lots of people who've been ill over Christmas/New year are still puzzling over that one. (Seriously though, work on something low-voltage, or write some code, but don't probe around live mains powered equipment when you're not at your most alert! Fortunately you didn't get bitten, or get anything in your eye from the unexpected component explosion. Damaged scopes and power bars can be replaced.)<br>
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-Richie, <br>
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