Herman,
Sorry bout that.... I meant EI....
The neutral is a current carrying conductor and should never be used as an equipment grounding conductor.
Per NEC code The Neutral conductor shall be connected to earth ground at service entrance and at no point there after.
How about just here in the US?
If the shield was connected to the chassis and the ground contact of the IEC and the equipment ground was floating would the PS enclosure act like an antenna?
Also what are the chances the B- of the DC output of the PS is connected to the chassis as well?
Sorry bout that.... I meant EI....
If the shield is tied to the neutral and the neutral line is tied back to earth ground I'm not sure if the lack of the 3rd line makes a difference, but I don't think all countries use polarized plugs with the neutral tied to earth.And that is why the shield shall never be tied to the neutral conductor. Reversed AC polarity would make the shield and the chassis hot.
The neutral is a current carrying conductor and should never be used as an equipment grounding conductor.
Per NEC code The Neutral conductor shall be connected to earth ground at service entrance and at no point there after.
Interesting question but I'm not familiar enough with power around the world to answer it.
How about just here in the US?
If the shield was connected to the chassis and the ground contact of the IEC and the equipment ground was floating would the PS enclosure act like an antenna?
Also what are the chances the B- of the DC output of the PS is connected to the chassis as well?

