Hi, I have a problem, and I was hoping someone here could shed some light on it.
I have been doing the infrastructure work for a client of mine, who lives in a (brand new) very large house. He has a lot of TV ports, fed off a Direct TV dish. When the installers came by, they provided an 8 port Zinwell multiswitch, which has been working well.
I was tasked with installing a second Zinwell switch, and cascading it to the first. I went up to the equipment room, removed one of the cables (the one going out to the second tuner of a tivo box), and immediately got a shock. All I did was touch the outside housing of the cable, under no circumstances did I touch the inside conductor. It was not a serious shock, but I did feel it. It felt like an AC pulse with a few higher voltage spikes spaced about 1 to 2 seconds apart. I turned off both switches (pulling the power cord), and the voltage was still present.
It appeared to be only this cable that was live, although I didn't test the others. I screwed it in to the other multiswitch, and after the cascading was done, no longer got a shock.
I came back wearing some vinyl gloves (which work pretty well for things like this) and took a voltmeter to the system, touched one end to the case of the switch (with all conductors installed), and got a reading of 3mv... basically 0V. I took off the offending cable, it also showed 0V. *then* I took off the offending cable, and another feed cable, and put a multimeter between the outer housings of the two cables. I got a 43V reading. This was probably what was shocking me.
Essentially, it appears that somewhere 43V are being injected into the system in the outer housing, and is being grounded out through one or more of the other cables.
My question is this: Is this voltage being in the system normal, abnormal, or hazardous? If it is normal, why is it present, and if it is not, where could it be coming from? And a related question is: Should the Direct TV installers have grounded the case of the multiswitch? There is a readily available copper pipe to clamp to.
Thanks in advance for your help.
I have been doing the infrastructure work for a client of mine, who lives in a (brand new) very large house. He has a lot of TV ports, fed off a Direct TV dish. When the installers came by, they provided an 8 port Zinwell multiswitch, which has been working well.
I was tasked with installing a second Zinwell switch, and cascading it to the first. I went up to the equipment room, removed one of the cables (the one going out to the second tuner of a tivo box), and immediately got a shock. All I did was touch the outside housing of the cable, under no circumstances did I touch the inside conductor. It was not a serious shock, but I did feel it. It felt like an AC pulse with a few higher voltage spikes spaced about 1 to 2 seconds apart. I turned off both switches (pulling the power cord), and the voltage was still present.
It appeared to be only this cable that was live, although I didn't test the others. I screwed it in to the other multiswitch, and after the cascading was done, no longer got a shock.
I came back wearing some vinyl gloves (which work pretty well for things like this) and took a voltmeter to the system, touched one end to the case of the switch (with all conductors installed), and got a reading of 3mv... basically 0V. I took off the offending cable, it also showed 0V. *then* I took off the offending cable, and another feed cable, and put a multimeter between the outer housings of the two cables. I got a 43V reading. This was probably what was shocking me.
Essentially, it appears that somewhere 43V are being injected into the system in the outer housing, and is being grounded out through one or more of the other cables.
My question is this: Is this voltage being in the system normal, abnormal, or hazardous? If it is normal, why is it present, and if it is not, where could it be coming from? And a related question is: Should the Direct TV installers have grounded the case of the multiswitch? There is a readily available copper pipe to clamp to.
Thanks in advance for your help.