I just tried too plug in a new pedal to test it out and got shocked, I tried another cord to be sure, another shock, unplugged the pedal to see if it was that, but nope the head is giving off current from the plugins, it's an old kustom 250 bass head, anybody have an idea?
My idea is that you need to disconnect whatever short there is, supplying high voltage to your pedal! Also, is the power cord to the amplifier inserted into the mains socket the right way round?
On older gear with two-wire power cords, ther was usually either a polarity switch, or the powr switch had two ON positions. By switching the polarity or using hte other ON positioin you could usually eliminate shocks.
BUT
That was when there were not a lot of grounded outlets. Now they all are. So the best thing to do is replace the old power cord with a three-wire grounded one.
BUT
That was when there were not a lot of grounded outlets. Now they all are. So the best thing to do is replace the old power cord with a three-wire grounded one.
i always plug my amp into a gfci extension cord when i'm playing live too...you never know if the house wiring is going to be up to code
3-wire power cord mod
That is hands down the best choice but you may experience some other problems after you do that. If all your filter/coupling caps are in good shape, good to go. If not, you find yourself replacing a few of them. Put that new cord on before you get a really nasty shock. You humm-reducer switch should still work, if your amp has one.
That is hands down the best choice but you may experience some other problems after you do that. If all your filter/coupling caps are in good shape, good to go. If not, you find yourself replacing a few of them. Put that new cord on before you get a really nasty shock. You humm-reducer switch should still work, if your amp has one.
- Status
- Not open for further replies.