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If it was me, I would have the IEC located in the middle of the backplate, make a Y wire harness with equal lengths for the two feed-thru to the two power supplies. A simple copper crimp at the 'neck' of the Y would be the 'joint' for the three wires.
One thing I found was that connecting the hot to pin 2 and the ground to pin 1 (closest to the mounting hole) on the SMPS's produced the lowest stray AC on the unit's ground. This was consistent across the three SMPS600's I tested.
That of course only works if you have a 3-pin mains connector, or a "polarized", unsymmetrical 2-pin connector. Doesn't really work with continental European power plugs that don't have polarity.
I am a bit confused about your measurements - fully understand how you measure it from a transformer with a linear supply, but not quite sure how you measured it on the SMPS - from where did you measure the AC differential to ground?
I really don't know how European power is setup. Is it balanced or ground referenced?
I just mounted the SMPS into the chassis & applied power. Since it is grounded to the chassis through one of the standoffs, any stray voltage on the ground also showed up on the chassis. I measured from the chassis to the AC outlet ground.
I really don't know how European power is setup. Is it balanced or ground referenced?........
Balanced. .....
North American 240vac is balanced (120vac-0-120vac), split phase.
Just checking - not that familiar with the US system, but aren't individual outlets single-ended, neutral-referenced 120V circuits?
Yes, most mains powered appliances in North America is run off of 120vac hot and a grounded neutral. As 3 phase is not common in residences, we have what 'old folks' (me) called 'house power' entering our mains panel, which are 2 anti-phase 120vac lines, from either of which we can wire 120vac circuits, but for large appliances we derive 240vac from both phases, balanced.
My only caveat is that one can reverse the wiring of a transformer's primary or smps, to minimize to chassis leakage, but ONLY after an on-off switch and fuse. If you reverse hot and neutral on a cord or IEC inlet, you compromise the safety functionality of the switch and fuse!