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.....The AC hot terminal delivers a nominal 117Vac sine wave which is unreferenced to any other voltage level. The AC neutral terminal provides a 0Vac signal which is the primary reference to the connection above.The earth ground is a safety terminal directly connected to an earthing rod sunk into the actual planet surface at the closest possible point, and with a surface area that can safely ground any current level (200 amps in a residential service) that can be provided. The above AC neutral s connected to this terminal at the breaker box in all cases.Thus, there is no question of misreferencing of the AC hot signal (different voltage levels on the positive and negative swings of the signal), since there is no reference to be miscentered. The only issue is the (possible) voltage difference between the AC neutral terminal and the earth ground terminal to which every durn thing is ultimately referenced. Set your meter on lowest DC volts, put one probe in the AC neutral terminal, the other in the earth ground terminal, and measure whatever (if any) difference there is. This is your DC offset. If any, which seems unlikely to me in a residential environment. There are some small complications if you live in a big apartment building or something, but otherwise I do not understand why you guyz are getting so elaborate about this (non)problem.Comments?......
Set your meter on lowest DC volts, put one probe in the AC neutral terminal, the other in the earth ground terminal, and measure whatever (if any) difference there is. This is your DC offset. If any, which seems unlikely to me in a residential environment. There are some small complications if you live in a big apartment building or something, but otherwise I do not understand why you guyz are getting so elaborate about this (non)problem. AudioTropic
George, what's the status Sir?Bob
George,You pay shipping both ways, I'll let you borrow mine.It's a Fluke 83 if it matters.Bob
Unless I can borrow a fluke meter from somebody locally, I don't currently possess the proper tools to try and take a measurement.
Quote from: zybar on 11 May 2009, 10:22 pmUnless I can borrow a fluke meter from somebody locally, I don't currently possess the proper tools to try and take a measurement. Again, you should call in the power company. They'll come out for free and settle this for once and for all. At least I ASSume it will be for free. You'll never know unless you call them.--Ethan
Call off the power company, your DC offset is being generated from within you house
Most DMMs won't give a reliable reading this way from what I've been told. Mine reads really erractically when doing this.