by Bobber » Sat Feb 20, 2010 8:00 pm UTC
Thank you so much for all the answers and the incredibly thorough explanations!
I have to admit that this is becoming too advanced for me. I am genuinely trying to understand this problem but you are using a lot of terms that (you couldn't possibly know that) I don't know.
By floating, I take it that this means that the voltage difference between, say 5V and ground in the device is actually not 5V if measured between 5V in the device and the Earth's actual ground. Is this correct?
My computer does have a metal case. I connected it to a steam heater, and I did connect it to an unpainted brass part to make sure I wasn't getting problems from the paint insulating.
The thing about my computer really needing to be grounded is a big surprise to me. In Denmark, few outlets support the third prong. If you get a three-pronged plug and you only have a two-holed outlet, often here you'll just say "bah" and saw off the third prong. I don't think any of my computers the past fifteen years have been grounded, ever. To elaborate: the power supply in my computer has three prongs, and the power supply cable has three holes in one end which go into the computer, but only two prongs in the other end to go into the socket! And this is the cable that came with the power supply!
Our sockets aren't phased (that's what you called it right) so it doesn't matter how you turn the plug, i.e. turning it upside down would make no difference. About the crossover thing, I'll give that a look when I get home.
It seems like the best suggestion so far would be to paint the metal casing connected to the wire shielding on one end to see if that would help. But, I would again like to point out that grounding my case DID stop me from being shocked when I connected the cable to my computer and touched it.
I hope I've understood all this right, but again, I admit that I have a hard time following the explanation about floating ground and floating transformers and impedance and whatnot. All I know of impedance is that it's used for sound devices but I don't know what a higher or lower impedance would do to such a device.
I have one final question. I have a USB headset with a microphone. When the microphone is turned on, both myself and people on the other end of a Skype call hear a strange "knocking" static, it sounds pretty low frequency and could very possibly be 60 hz (which is what we use for wiring here in Denmark). Question: could these two problems (60 hz static, improper wiring) be related?
Edit: Uh, a third thing: when I play 3D games or watch a full-screen video in a Flash player, my entire computer (cursor, sound, everything) lags in perfect sync with what I once believed to me received packets on the network, but I now realize that it might be in sync with the same static knocking heard in my headset. This might be far-fetched, but could it be that I actually have a plethora of problems with my computer all caused by improper wiring?
Since it only happens when my graphics card is running in 3D mode, an explanation could be that it draws power in another way when it does this, which enables the problem. Again, I admit that this is a very far fetched theory that I am mostly pulling out of my ass, and it's probably just wishful thinking that I could solve all my computer problems of the past year or so in one swift move.
I don't twist the truth, I just make it complex.
mrbaggins wrote:There are two tools in life, duct tape and WD40. If it moves and shouldn't, use the tape. If it doesn't move and should, use the WD40.