Ground Cheaters-Good or Bad?


I experience hum problems which I assosiate with grounding. I wonder if using a ground cheater defeats the purpose/advantages of aftermarket power cords. If so, does anyone know of an "audiophile grade" cheater plug?
128x128justlisten

Showing 2 responses by bob_bundus

Fortunately I haven't (yet) had to use a lifted-ground to eliminate my (rare) hum problems, so I can't speak from self-experience. Electrically this is a no-no, & is even considred dangerous, esp. if there's a bypass cap. failure, etc, internal to the "problem" component. But realistically you can normally get away with doing this. I have read that componenets can be "tuned" to sound best when ideally polarized as-such, but have never tried it. One possible approach is to experiment with Mike VansEvers' (www.vansevers.com) two-prong reversible power cords. They have detachable grounding leads, which are then (theoretically = read disclaimer) connected, once the 'best sounding' polarity is found for that component. But then again, some 'philes realize a better sound with no ground at all. I question the practice of using a cheap cheater adaptor on a high-Q power cord; you're possibly degrading it via that approach? But if that works for you, you could (theoretically) remove the ground prong from the original plug with a hacksaw. Or you could (theoretically) even remove the ground connection inside your outlet box (although that would un-ground everything pluged in there). Another possibility is to buy some Wattgate, etc. plugs and use them in place of original plugs, sans ground prong. Then there's the dedicated-ground approach to try too, but that's not a cheater plug, & falls way outside the ream of Justlisten's question. Sorry - I've gone on...
It's likely safe, but not recommended. Because since everything is cheated, you have no grounding to any of the components. Also any stray AC leakage is now carried through the signal path (your interconnects) which should not be a good thing. To answer the safety question you really need a multimeter. Even a cheapy fron The Shack will tell if anything has stray AC on it. Measure from a known earth ground to each of the metal cases (the components) and to other exposed metal surfaces (like RCA plug hoods). If you find any large stray AC voltages, then you're not safe. A neon lamp will also work, but doesn't fire on until ~90VAC, so if it lights you KNOW you're in trouble for sure!