We have some offline , 150W LED drivers. These don’t comprise a mains filter because they are switched linear regulator based.
The driver PCB sits on an earthed heatsink, but earth isn’t taken to any pads on the driver PCB.
Today a production staff member brought me a driver PCB and complained that it was drawing 74W instead of the usual 71W. (This is a dimmed down version).
Anyway, I therefore cranked up the AC power source in the Test Dept (with its isolated output) and supplied the problem board with isolated 240VAC. I noticed indeed that the board was drawing 74W. I therefore attached the scope probe to the reference voltage on the driver board that controls the amount of LED current (this was across a ceramic capacitor and the connection was made via a twisted pair flying wire) and then switched the product back on. –With the scope probe connected, the board only drew 66W. I then took the scope probe off and the board again drew 74W.
I then manually added some 1n5 Y capacitors from the live and neutral input traces of the board, and connected the other lead of these caps to an earth wire. The problem did not improve.
Next I am thinking of adding some ferrite beads to live and neutral. Also a common mode choke. Can you think of any more solutions? Maybe I need to use an isolated differential probe instead.
(As an aside, when I unhooked only the ground clip of the scope probe from the flying wire, [leaving the main scope probe clip connected] the board then drew 363W permanently!....However, this problem was indeed solved by adding the Y capacitors as described above)