F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Addressing grounding concerns

Addressing grounding concerns

Addressing grounding concerns

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DrummerBS
Member
185
12-29-2025, 09:48 PM
#1
Someone is wondering about the reason behind the current flow on the exterior of your PreSonus Studio Live 16.02, especially since the outlets appear to be grounded.
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DrummerBS
12-29-2025, 09:48 PM #1

Someone is wondering about the reason behind the current flow on the exterior of your PreSonus Studio Live 16.02, especially since the outlets appear to be grounded.

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EmreDG
Junior Member
4
12-31-2025, 10:31 AM
#2
Are your wall outlet correctly grounded? You can find affordable testers at major hardware stores. A multimeter works too if you already own one. Grounding standards have changed over time. Previously, all water pipes were made of copper, providing a solid ground. However, the introduction of plastic piping altered that situation.
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EmreDG
12-31-2025, 10:31 AM #2

Are your wall outlet correctly grounded? You can find affordable testers at major hardware stores. A multimeter works too if you already own one. Grounding standards have changed over time. Previously, all water pipes were made of copper, providing a solid ground. However, the introduction of plastic piping altered that situation.

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Darkjango808
Junior Member
6
01-01-2026, 05:34 AM
#3
they are properly grounded there is a 22-foot copper rod acting as ground
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Darkjango808
01-01-2026, 05:34 AM #3

they are properly grounded there is a 22-foot copper rod acting as ground

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Demethius
Member
50
01-05-2026, 07:18 PM
#4
I don't have enough context to give a precise answer, but someone might help if you clarify the issue and what steps you've tried.
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Demethius
01-05-2026, 07:18 PM #4

I don't have enough context to give a precise answer, but someone might help if you clarify the issue and what steps you've tried.

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DerpGamerPJ
Junior Member
17
01-07-2026, 04:15 PM
#5
The connection is straightforward to verify. A 22-foot length appears unlikely. The stakes are under an inch in diameter and need to be driven into the earth. Around 2-3 footers might work. The grounding could be secure, but it may not connect to the outlet. If properly grounded, it will, otherwise it won’t.
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DerpGamerPJ
01-07-2026, 04:15 PM #5

The connection is straightforward to verify. A 22-foot length appears unlikely. The stakes are under an inch in diameter and need to be driven into the earth. Around 2-3 footers might work. The grounding could be secure, but it may not connect to the outlet. If properly grounded, it will, otherwise it won’t.

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DrewbyEgg
Member
86
01-09-2026, 04:07 AM
#6
I checked it using a calibrated fluke multimeter that was set up roughly five minutes prior to testing
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DrewbyEgg
01-09-2026, 04:07 AM #6

I checked it using a calibrated fluke multimeter that was set up roughly five minutes prior to testing