Regrettably I think that Electro Detective's reply 86 in https://www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/floating-scopes/ is the appropriate attitude, including ...
"I'm jumping ship (for once) and following the majority.. to recommend LEAVE WELL ALONE if not 100% sure,
or best practice is to dip into the piggy bank for a differential probe as front line measurement cannon fodder
There are TOO MANY VARIABLES that are almost IMPOSSIBLE to document and break down here for the casual user wanting a 'fast fix'
which usually means a good chance for an earth/ground related BANG! "
Quite so, ED's reply is the 'modern' philosophy in today's litigation mad society where practices like floating scopes could never be taught for fear of culpability. It was by necessity back then as the vast bulk of scopes didn't have differential plugins nor were differential probes as widely available as they are now.
Ach. I don't think ED's statement supports the contention that the fear of culpability is a central issue. His "conversion" seems to be based on a realisation of the reality that there are subtle dangers that cannot be quickly and easily taught to newbies.
That floating was done in the past is, as you say, because the equipment wasn't (widely) available.
Yes but if any of us on the forum suggest floating scopes, aren't we in some way culpable ?
The dangers aren't subtle, they're deadly !
What I would offer as comment is a Tek 24** wasn't a cheap scope back then and any that would set it up as a dedicated floating scope would've known the risks to both themselves and instrument.
ISTR an anecdote on TekScopes about someone that realised it was dangerous, took precautions - and still died.
As per above and user error cannot be overlooked.
Drive a car at highway speeds on back roads without a seatbelt and the result can be similar.
The likely extreme voltages it ever saw in floating mode would most likely be just rectified mains of which it could handle with comparative ease.
That could add 350V (240*sqrt(2)) across some components.
Exactly but it's an offset that the whole scope is subjected to not so much a stress on individual componentry across the whole scope. The PSU is where the greatest stress will be.
I get that if this scope is to be shared, culpability again rises it's ugly head where really any use of a scope and in fact any test gear exposes the operator to risk.
If this is too much to bear along with usage of a scope with uncertain history.....then buy a new scope !
The "it might hurt someone else" is the key consideration, as opposed to the Darwin Award.
If someone is prepared to float an old scope, there's nothing preventing them floating a new scope - but that's outside the scope of this thread.
Ways of increasing confidence in lack-of-danger is the topic of this thread.
The safest move is to restore the mains Gnd, period. That assumes the supply ground is sound and in perfect order.
In the end, I think future failure modes are unknown and can't possibly be known. ...
If the risk is perceived to be high, junk the scope. Personally, I would replace the cord to ensure that the chassis and BNC connectors are grounded and put it back in service. I can't possibly predict some inter-winding anomaly and I doubt that I would worry so long as all exposed non-current carrying metallic surfaces were grounded. Even if the scope went into hand grenade mode, I doubt the damage would be all that extensive. A few pops, a few sizzles and that would be about it.
Those were my initial thoughts, until I did some research and came across the Tek statement. That raised doubts that my inaction might result in a newbie being hurt.
And actually how old is that Tek statement ?
You can be quite sure their documentation has been updated to make users fully aware of the risks of floating scopes so not to expose themselves to today's litigation mad world.
Many Tek documents that were once on their website are now gone without trace unless you can find them stashed on another website.