So I played again today and felt the shocks again, a little stronger than before, but only from the mounting point that I showed yesterday in the photo, not from the pedals, wheel rim or paddles. I was also getting very light shocks from the iMac's aluminium chassis. My girlfriend came home and didn't feel any shocks at all. She was wearing platform heels and I was barefoot, so I guess I was earthing and she wasn't. Would playing with shoes solves the problem? The reason I play barefoot is that my feet are so big (size 13.5) that it's almost impossible for me to use the brake pedal without clipping the clutch unless I'm barefoot (or socks only).
I'm trying to make sense of this. It depends on where your feet were positioned when you were getting the shocks. If they were on the pedals, then I'm entirely at a loss to understand it, because your body would already have been connected (via your feet) to the 0 V line of the wheel system and so your arm shouldn't have got any kind of a shock from touching the screws on the stand. If however they were on the floor, then you'll probably have been slightly better earthed than your girlfriend who had heels on, making it more likely for you to feel the shock than her... (But see recommendation below.) If you wear shoes yourself then you will be slightly less well earthed; that may not be enough to prevent you getting any shocks at all, but heck, why not try it?
The pedals are fixed by metal bolts, and the stand is placed on a tiled floor, with screw-in plastic feet.
Here is a photo of the bottom of the wheel stand. And
here is a photo of the overall setup. Do you think nylon screws will fix this?
Nylon screws might isolate the pedals from the stand (and thus might cure the issue) but would they be mechanically strong enough to hold the pedals in place? I'm not sure.
Is this dangerous? My understanding is that the amperage is what matters when it comes to electrocution, not voltage. Is this correct?
The level of leakage current I'm seeing on my G27 power supply is unequivocally not dangerous (0.1 mA) and yes the danger to humans is basically about current rather than voltage (but we're resistive enough that low voltages like the 24 V DC on the wheel simply
can't push enough current to harm us). The net effect of the tiny capacitor is akin to holding one end of a high-value resistor (say a couple of million Ohms) and touching a live mains wire with the other end. NB: I do NOT recommend trying that
Once again I've tested the wheel and stand with my PlayStation, but barefoot this time, and I can confirm that it is not giving me any shocks, so the problem must be either from the iMac or the tiled floor. When I play on the PlayStation, both my feet and the wheel stand are on a rug, and the floor is paved with a linoleum covering.
Pic.
What would be the best course of action?
1. Buy an earthed PSU
2. Nylon bolts for the pedal plate
3. Earth the wheel stand (I don't really have the expertise to do this but I'm sure I could figure it out)
4. Use shoes
5. Cover the mounting point with an insulating material
6. Something else?
Honestly, the very first thing I'd recommend you do is to put beyond doubt which bit of kit is the source of the shocks - the PC or the wheel (or something else
). Just so we're sure what issue we're solving...
The scheme I'd propose would be to set it all up, confirm you're getting the shocks, and then just switch off or unplug the Logitech power brick. If the shocks go away, I think you can safely blame the wheel. If they don't go away, then I'd unplug the USB lead to the PC, with the Logitech brick powered up again. If they go away now, it's the iMac PSU. If they still don't go away, then the sanity check is to verify that they go away with both the USB lead unplugged and the Logitech brick powered off; if they finally go away
then, the conclusion is that BOTH the Logitech and iMac supplies are contributing to the leakage (quite feasible, now that I consider it, and I guess that with two power supplies providing leakage, the maximum current will basically double, though the voltage will be unaffected). If the sanity check fails (i.e. the shocks still don't go away) then it would seem that neither supply is the source
(Btw, an alternative to unplugging the USB lead would be to unplug the power supply for the iMac.)
I must confess though that the solutions are probably independent of the source. Earthing
any part of the whole shebang (= wheel, PC, stand) should prevent the shocks from
any part of the system, unless the iMac is somehow not connecting its 0 V line to the USB cable (this seems very unlikely). If the vendor can confirm that that earthed PSU links the earth to the 0 V line of the DC cable then that is probably a nice way to tackle it. (It would be stupid to sell an "earthed" PSU that doesn't do this, but stupid stuff happens.)
Insulating the mounting point (if you can really prevent the screws making an electrical contact with the stand) could also do a decent job - it would stop you getting a buzz from the stand, but not from the iMac chassis, so it might still be a good enough solution. You could even just put some insulation (e.g. tape?) over the screws on the stand which have been delivering the shocks (again, no shocks from that bit of the stand but potential mild shocks from iMac).
(Damn, sorry for yet another essay... :-S)