Hello.
I was trying to probe my circuit powered by my garbo Amazon power supply.
when doing so, I noticed some very very light buzzing/humming from my PSU when my ground clip is attached. I also once saw a slight spark when removing the clip. It made me worried so I stopped and investigated.
I found 4.8Vppk on both terminals of my power supply relative to ground. To check the impedance/current, I tried creating a shunt using a 20k and 2.2k resistor.
The 20k resistor collapsed the 4.8Vpp to 1.38Vpp and the 2.2k collapsed the 4.8Vppk to 0.740Vpp. This is obviously a leakage voltage from either the transformer or other components, maybe the Y capacitor is letting 60hz pass through too. My calculations tell me it'd be 96uA if I'm correct. (50,000ohm~ leakage impedance)
This makes me concerned that the currents flowing to the ground terminal of my scope, although very small could potentially damage it. Is probing isolated circuits like this a good/common practice? Is this simply nothing to worry about and normal? What is the best solution for this? Is it to just make sure all my circuits are earth-references? Is it to buy a better Lab bench power supply (The good ones are sadly upwards of 500$ and lower wattage, an insane price for me)? I've been told that to avoid the need for an expensive (500CAD minimum...) differential probe, isolating the circuit is a common practice. Is this wrong/bad?
My other issue with differential probe is not just the cost, but the noise, 20mv Peak to peak is a great amount of noise, not to mention the very low bandwidths of most common budget probes. I have been debating trying a DIY approach, but I have extreme doubts about being able to create the same quality probe for cheaper.
I knnow that just by existing near electricity, our bodies act as antennas and pass small currents through it, same must already be happning to the scope (Although I assume it'd be in the nano amp range, not micro amps that I calculated, 96uA)
I'm also going to order a GFCI in the future because I can be clumsy/forgetful...