Originally posted by: TechnoKid
Open ground. Its common in older houses.
Good surge protectors do not shunt all the voltage and current from a lighting strike to the ground; this is because the surge can [possibly] travel back onto the neutral (where the neutral and ground bus bars are bonded at the service panel) and damage other equipment that is not even on the same circuit. A good surge suppressor will have capacitors to store teh excess energy instead of shunting it to ground.
Originally posted by: PhasmatisNox
Does it come on in any other other rooms? If so, there's a ground fault. Call an electrician.
lol, I was looking through one of the old threads I made about it..Originally posted by: Ornery
Jesus Eli, fix that shlt! You've got reversed polarity on at least one of the outlets! :Q
Geesh, what a PITA. I'll have to get one of those checkers, and do all of them I guess.Originally posted by: Ornery
Probably more than one. 40% of the ones in this house were reversed!
Originally posted by: Eli
Have similar issues in this house. Old house, 2-prong outlets.
We have concrete floors. If you touch the concrete floor in your bare feet, and touch anything metal that is plugged in - you recieve a little shock.
Infact, if you hold 1 lead of an LED and touch the other to the metal object, it will light.
I've got pictures around here somewhere.. lol
Originally posted by: Ornery
Sheesh, you build computers, you can do it! Go to Ace hardware, and tell them you want to make an extension cord, using a weatherproof gang box. It uses special connectors, which they should have. Tell them you have to run an earth ground from a cold water line, and they'll sell you the length of wire you need, as well as the grounding clamp.
I assume the outlet you're plugging into has three conductors, which would be against code, but it is what it is. Anyway, tell the Ace hardware guy what you have, and that you need a heavy appliance cord to connect to your box. Sacrificing a cheap power strip may be cheaper than anything else, but see what he suggests. Run the ground and cord into the box and make the connections. Use a multimeter to double check everything. You absolutely MUST own a multimeter if you don't already, so now is the time to buy one. When you're done, plug it in, and then plug your surge strip into it. It should show everything is kosher! All that hardware should be about $25.00.
How am I going to do that when there is no ground?Originally posted by: Ornery
A "checker" won't tell you shlt. Use a multimeter and check voltage from hot to ground, and neutral to ground. That's the only way to be sure.