Wow what a great response to my first thread! Y'all sure know how to make a guy feel welcome. Definitely a few angles in here that I had not thought of before.
Recommendations on isolation transformers is also welcome!
Any thoughts?
No thoughts just an question, how many watts you need ?
I figure 400-500VA is probably more than enough for any single device I would want to test. I was definitely looking for a portable unit as some have suggested, which I would only use when I need it (which honestly will likely not be very often). I'm thinking about a unit similar to this:
http://www.tripplite.com/en/products/model.cfm?txtModelID=227The MSRP is kind of high but I've seen them for around US $200.
I'm also considering the 250VA model which is considerably cheaper.
Nevertheless - RCD - YES YES YES.
In Australia it is now mandatory that all houses (with recent wiring work performed) must have an RCD fitted.
You can always use another one, local to you bench, just to be sure.
Besides all that 1000 square feet - NIRVARNA - my shed at home is only 600 sq ft and that usually houses two cars :-(
Here in the US GFI/RCDs are still only required in specific areas and they generally pop out at 5mA. AFCI breakers are now pretty universally required on branch circuits to all areas of the home where people might be regularly and I think some of these units also provide ground fault protection. My house was built a couple years before that was universal but I'm considering up-fitting at least some of the circuits here with those devices.
Wow 1000sq ft awesome! That is way more generous than the 100sq ft my wife actually let me have!
BTW ... I've always had a big kill switch on the front of my benches. A really good idea.
Do you use a large rocker switch as Psi showed in his picture or do you have a "big red button" type arrangement with some sort of shunt trip or a relay that kicks out when you slam it? I used to have the latter in the workshop I had as a kid. Big red buttons rock! Bonus if it flashes.
If you make sure you clip your scope ground to neutral you should be ok ...
Is that really what you meant to say?
Ground is not the same thing as neutral. If, by some freak failure, you loose your neutral connection and you have your scope ground tied to neutral you'll have all of the AC current coursing through ground. Not a good thing.
Also even in the best case where your neutral is intact, if you were using a RCD I think you would likely cause it to trip . The only time it's really OK to consider ground = neutral is generally at the service entrance where all your bonding points are tied together.
Reminds me of a story though...this past Thanksgiving I was at my in-laws and we got on the topic of electric work in old farm houses. He told me a story about how one time he lost the neutral up at the barn so he just hooked it to a copper pipe that was going back to the house. Problem solved! Still picking up the rubber bands that popped in my head that day.
There was a book I was reading a while back (can't remember the name right now) that talked about how the problem with most safety systems and procedures is that probability-wise there is generally little to no penalty for defeating them.
Thanks,
Phil