Author Topic: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?  (Read 10117 times)

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Online MathWizardTopic starter

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How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« on: January 28, 2022, 04:16:28 am »
I guess there have been lots of linesmen, utility workers, industrial workers that get hurt or killed working on high energy systems. What about repair technicians back when all TV's and things had CRT's in them ? How dangerous was it really and how much worse is it if the TV was on when u made a mistake or had an accident ?

I have a couple of old things with CRT's in them, they "only" have about 1000V or so tho. I plan to know those circuits backwards before I go looking at that stuff. I wish I had an old, all/mostly discrete TV to play with.
 

Offline bob91343

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #1 on: January 28, 2022, 04:37:36 am »
As I remember it, those CRT anode potentials were indeed dangerous.  For color TV they were up in the 25 kV range.  It doesn't take much capacitance to store a lot of energy at those potentials.  And energy is what can get you.  Any voltage above around 100V will cause conduction of human tissue, enough to cause problems.  As for electrocution, I believe the old electric chairs were around just a few kV.
 

Online bdunham7

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #2 on: January 28, 2022, 04:48:25 am »
I guess there have been lots of linesmen, utility workers, industrial workers that get hurt or killed working on high energy systems. What about repair technicians back when all TV's and things had CRT's in them ? How dangerous was it really and how much worse is it if the TV was on when u made a mistake or had an accident ?

I have a couple of old things with CRT's in them, they "only" have about 1000V or so tho. I plan to know those circuits backwards before I go looking at that stuff. I wish I had an old, all/mostly discrete TV to play with.

A CRT television shock certainly could stop your heart if you were unlucky--and it did happen--but the majority of the time you just got a really hard wallop, like a very powerful electric fence.  The total energy in an CRO without post-deflection acceleration is reasonably low, but not something I would willingly risk getting fried by.  I don't know how much worse it would be if the device were on, but it certainly isn't better.  With a capacitor, even if you can't let go it will finish discharging very quickly. 
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Offline AntiProtonBoy

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #3 on: January 28, 2022, 05:29:35 am »
EHT output from flyback transformers are typically around 25 kV and deliver very little current on their own, if disconnected from the tube. I re-purposed a few of those, using a custom driver circuit, and got zapped by those a countless times. The real danger comes from the tube itself, as conceptually operates like a high voltage capacitor, and an unplanned anode discharge through your body could be potentially lethal.
 
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Offline eti

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #4 on: January 28, 2022, 06:51:25 am »
A teenager like me, back in 1991, seems to have survived well, since I was trained well and didn’t make daft assumptions.

Back in ye olden days, back when people had brains that were generally fully functional, and I’d think that generally no mollycoddled and dumbed down fools were in charge of repairing equipment, when training manuals and service schematics were properly written, engineers were fully competent and aware of the high voltages present on the usual suspects. This fact has been pointed out by Paul Carlson (“Mr Carlson’s Lab” on YT) many a time - people didn’t need “protecting” with PVC boots and isolated guards, as they knew what they were doing.
 

Offline Ian.M

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #5 on: January 28, 2022, 07:11:20 am »
Then you've got mains frequency EHT transformers which were fairly common in vintage CROs.   Those could supply an overload of tens of mA for several minutes before they'd burn out, so were absolutely lethal as they could continuously electrocute you, rather than the one big shock then typically 1mA a flyback EHT transformer could deliver, even though their EHT was typically lower than you'd find in a large screen CRT TV with a flyback EHT transformer.

 

Offline Marco

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #6 on: January 28, 2022, 09:37:24 am »
A CRT had a lot less HV capacitance than a mid sized van de Graaff. For an operating device it was probably less dangerous than mains, more likely to knock you off. On the other hand, it might knock you into a mains connection.
« Last Edit: January 28, 2022, 09:39:04 am by Marco »
 

Offline Neper

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #7 on: January 28, 2022, 10:58:29 am »
As the old saying goes:

It's volts that jolts, but mils that kills!
If I knew everything I'd be starving because no-one could afford me.
 
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Offline tautech

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #8 on: January 28, 2022, 02:41:17 pm »
Best the ranges of voltages found in such devices are properly specified and there's normally 4 to be wary of.

Lowest is the CRT plate output supply of transistor based scopes but it can still be some 150V.
Next is the older instruments using hollow glass and these can top out ~350V.
EHT is next, typically negative for the CRT cathode, grid biasing and such and a wide range of voltages exist in various equipment, 1-3 KV is typical.
PDA for the CRT anode when used is typically derived from the EHT typically using triplers or quintuplers and in scopes can approach 10KV.

They all bite and one should use safe practices when playing with this stuff and take great care.
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Offline mawyatt

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #9 on: January 28, 2022, 02:58:18 pm »
As a kid I worked repairing all sorts of things to pay for college, color TVs were one of those. The CRTs could hold the 25KV charge for quite some time, you quickly learned to discharge the CRT with a screwdriver before poking around inside the TV  :o

The biggest risk wasn't from the shock but the reaction to the shock, recall gashing my arm on some sheet metalwork inside the TV when I brushed across the HV CRT cable :P

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Offline woody

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #10 on: January 28, 2022, 03:12:37 pm »
I still remember rather vividly how I found out that a CRT is basically a big HV capacitor. It was the eighties, I was young and eager and worked in an outfit that made, sold and repaired slot machines and video games.

One such game had a problem with its monitor. A colleague of mine had removed the CRT from its electronics and placed it on a chair. For the time being. A couple of minutes later someone wanted a seat. I said, oh, take that one, let me remove the CRT from it. I placed one hand on the frame, the other on the little hole in the side where the HV connection goes and learned a valuable lesson. These things hold their charge. For a loooong time.

Ah well, I lived. But it made me weary of high voltages from then on  :)
 

Offline dmills

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #11 on: January 28, 2022, 03:17:41 pm »
By FAR the bigger danger was that most tellies of that generation were live chassis.

The final anode supply could only generate pretty negligible current and even the energy stored in the CRT capacitance was mainly dangerous for the reaction (Dropped at least one big CRT because of an unexpected belt from the anode cap), but if the mains was on and you twitched and touched something you shouldn't have (Tube base and yoke were both likely lads here), a very low current affair could turn into something with the mains behind it.

Regards, Dan.
 
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Online MathWizardTopic starter

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #12 on: January 28, 2022, 11:33:40 pm »
Ok so mostly survivable but painful. I think I've shocked myself with a peizo BBQ lighter before, but nothing like an electric flyswatter, or taser, electric fence/etc. Holding a cheap ebay plasma globe once (by the outside of plastic globe) I did not like the tingle I felt, it was like I was getting a bunch of static shocks from my carpet or the bed??.

What about the HV for CCFL in LCD TV's ? I guess it's pretty low current, I have an old LCD TV power board I want to look at the PFC and buck sections on the scope. I was thinking of just disabling the CCFL chip, but I bet utube is full of videos of cool looking things to try with anything HV-low current.
 

Offline BrokenYugo

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #13 on: January 29, 2022, 01:42:00 am »
Probing around the hot side of a SMPS, even with all the recommended precautions (differential probe, GFCI, etc.) is way more likely to be life ending than the CCFL inverters. If you're afraid of the latter you should be terrified of the former. I've been bit by a backlight inverter before, IIRC it's more that it quickly burns a hole in the skin than the electric nature of it, fairly high frequency.

As everybody else mentioned, the big risk with the CRT HV is the tube envelope forms the HV filter cap in most CRT televisions, and it holds enough charge to really make you jump and do who knows what damage to yourself. Lower frequency analog scopes that do all the acceleration in the gun (no anode connection near the screen) tend to have a resistor network across the HV supply to derive the focus and screen voltages, so they're pretty safe once powered off, and the power supplies for the final amplifiers and whatnot are probably more lethal energy wise anyway, much like the TV.
 

Offline CatalinaWOW

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #14 on: January 29, 2022, 02:32:21 am »
This is one of those loaded questions.  There is no question that those CRTs and their drive voltages were potentially lethal.  But perhaps the best analogy is tall buildings.  Any building over two stories is potentially lethal.  You could even roughly equate one story with 24 V.  And convince yourself that buildings over 20 stories are just incredibly dangerous.  But large numbers of people use and occupy such buildings and the deaths from those buildings are dominated by suicides.

Designers, manufacturers, technicians and hobby people worked on CRTs very frequently, and only very infrequently were injured or killed.  Just as with tall buildings the potential is there, but a combination of widely used safety features and widely known usage precautions results in relatively little mayhem.

For a personal anecdote, I generally used the one hand in a pocket rule, attempted to safely discharge capacitors and probed with extreme caution, but still had a couple of oops moments.  The reason I am still able to type this in spite of those potentially deadly incidents is a combination of things including relatively high resistance in the ground path from non-conducting floors and relatively non-conducting shoes, high skin resistance because of dry air and personal genetics, good heart health,  relatively low energy in the circuits because of intelligent design and a number of other factors.   

The high voltage in the CRT is only one of the conditions that needs to occur for a lethal event.
 

Offline james_s

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #15 on: January 29, 2022, 03:53:09 am »
I've been zapped by the EHT on a 19" CRT before, it HURT, but I'm still here. It felt like a powerful static electricity zap. Technically it could mess up your heart, but it's unlikely in most cases. Even so, be very careful.

The ~180V B+ in many CRT displays is actually much more dangerous than the EHT, it can deliver a great deal more current.
 

Offline andy2000

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #16 on: January 29, 2022, 07:48:13 am »
By far the most dangerous part of any CRT display is the mains supply and B+ voltage.  The HV supply is well insulated, and not capable of supplying much current.  A microwave oven is much more dangerous. 
 
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Offline Ian.M

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #17 on: January 29, 2022, 08:43:13 am »
... except as I stated above - mains derived EHT for a CRT in a really vintage CRO or valve TV  is generally at least as dangerous and possibly more dangerous* than the HT in a microwave.



* Its typically several times the voltage of microwave HV so will jump further to bite you! OTOH the reservoir capacitor is typically a much lower value than a microwave one, so there *may* be less energy instantaneously available to blow chunks out of your fingers and stop your heart!  :-\
 

Offline jonpaul

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #18 on: January 29, 2022, 01:10:50 pm »
Bonjour a tous: Just notice this thread now, late to respond...For decades I had designed and manufactured special purpose    magnetics,   HV modules, CRT display drivers and HVPS.

1/ classes of HV, with different hazards:

Mains freq transformer raw PS with large filter caps
High freq (flyback) transformer with voltage mult or rect, small caps (most CRT)
DC HV at the CRT leads

2/ Shock damage is often collateral: Your hand touched the CRT Ultor anode connection, hand and arm are shocked, your sudden motion throws you to the floor or hand hits the CRT (see below)
Certainty shock effect  its unpredictable as some are more susceptible (moist skin? Pacemaker?, Elderly? Standing with thick rubber shoes or barefoot on concrete that's wet?)).

3/ CRTs are large vacuum vessels designed to be in a TV or scope with safety shields and safety bezel.
In servicing we may have to defeat interlocks and remove such shields.
Striking a CRT can break the glass, causing a serious implosion.
Glass shards are thrown many meters as shrapnel.
Extreme danger to face, eyes, bleeding...VERY bad.
Risk of implosion damage is like the CRT dia exp 3. (volume enclosed) 

(NOTE: in my experience I have had all sorts of shocks and at least two implosions of CRT or arc lamp)

4/ DC and mains freq is most dangerous, high frequency AC HV like a flyback or Tesla coil may no shock, but the RF energy may cause burns and arcs.

5/ Typical scope HV 2kV...15kV, color TV were up to 25 kV and projection TV to 35kV.
The Aquadag (conductive anode coating) to ground capacitance is typically between  50...3000 pF.
Calculate stored energy 1/2 C *Vexp2.

I strongly suggest  the OP read the literature and books of CRT and HV safety before proceeding with his experiments.
Nikola Tesla (NOT THE CAR!) would always stand on rubber mats and keep one hand in his pocket!

Bon Chance!

Jon








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Offline Labrat101

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #19 on: January 29, 2022, 01:34:46 pm »
This is a very interesting that this has come up . How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT.
Reminds me of an accident that happened in one my father's TV & Radio shops .. Way back in the 60s.
One of the techs was working on a very large TV . When he some how touched the HV wire to the tube . These old
sets had about 25 - 30KV . The The shock through  him across the room with enough force to Crack his head open on the
Wall on the opposite side of the work shop . If I remember right, he had over 10 stitches. 
Its not so much the voltage its more how your body mussels react to electricity .
 And whats in your flight path when landing.
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Offline jonovid

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #20 on: January 29, 2022, 01:45:16 pm »
trivia 4 u
I would play with old valve TV chassis as a kid, would get blue corona discharge off the CRT HT  make pinwheel spin.
I can not say how much ozone I generatord. but never got zapped because i'm still here  ;D
 its unknown the level of x rays coming off the output valve .
but many power valves of that time did emit x rays from the gaps in the sides of the plates.
to make a corona discharge generator from an old TV one had to strip the TV cases of all non non essential electronics.
cut out all un-used electronics from the chassis
however this made the HT power supply voltage rise as valve TV cases did not have HT voltage regulation but relied on load & a resistor network.
did blow up a 300v electrolytic capacitor by hooking it up by mistake to 400v coming off the rectifier valve.
-discharge of smoke & spraying electrolyte across the room.  :palm:
« Last Edit: January 29, 2022, 02:22:30 pm by jonovid »
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Offline Jester

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The Chucky & Horowitz story
« Reply #21 on: January 29, 2022, 06:16:53 pm »
Back in the 70’s in high school electronics class we had a term where we fixed TV’s instead of conventional lab work. The brightest kid in the class was super skinny and was nicknamed Chucky because he was the opposite of Charles Atlas. The bully antagonist was Horowitz, big and as stupid as they come would have married his sister if given the choice. Horowitz made it his mission to give Chucky a hard time. It started with Horowitz charging up a 100V capacitor, sneaking up behind Chucky while he was probing inside a TV and then touching the capacitor to Chucky to give him a jolt. This went on and on with ever larger capacitors and escalating voltage levels. One day Horowitz showed us this huge string of series capacitors that he was planning to use on Chucky, Horowitz then proceeded to charge up the contraption with the 25kV anode connection on one of the TV’s. We heard a good snap and Horowitz came flying out of the back side of the TV and crashed into everything in his way. We all had a good laugh and that was the last time Horowitz attempted to shock Chucky.

 

Offline floobydust

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #22 on: January 29, 2022, 07:36:59 pm »
CRT HV was mainly scary and risky when you had to go in the set to probe things. You can't always access the underside of a pcb or chassis to scope things.

Putting your arm inside the chassis, the electrostatic crackling and your arm/hand hair getting pulled up is scary, not for the faint-hearted. Because your arm's reflexes can jerk and you don't want to hit the CRT neck, it's like a Zen experience. Measuring the CRT HV with a HV probe was not nearly as scary as putting your arm in there. I still glow from 6BK4 radiation...

In the shop one tech would charge electrolytic capacitors to 450VDC and throw them, yelling "catch!". If you caught the cap you got nailed. I never did, just let them land on the ground. The Heathkit cap tester could charge to 600VDC. Probably could kill someone that much DC hand to hand  :phew:
 

Offline tautech

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #23 on: January 29, 2022, 07:54:16 pm »
In the shop one tech would charge electrolytic capacitors to 450VDC and throw them, yelling "catch!". If you caught the cap you got nailed. I never did, just let them land on the ground. The Heathkit cap tester could charge to 600VDC. Probably could kill someone that much DC hand to hand  :phew:
Mechanic shops played that game too back when ignitions were all points based. Charge points suppression cap with ignition tester and play catch the ZAP !
New ones that didn't leak much just left charged on a workbench would catch out the unwary too !  >:D
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Offline Vtile

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Re: How dangerous or lethal is HV in CRT devices?
« Reply #24 on: January 29, 2022, 09:23:59 pm »
Games for true idiots.
 


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