I am using Windows 7 on a Sony VAIO laptop. When I connected my PC to the charger, I felt a little electric shock when I touched the VGA and other ports. I tested with a current detector and found that I was indeed correct: there is current flowing through the ports. I checked my other laptops but it is not the case with other laptops.

Can anyone help in answering the following questions:

  1. Why is there current flowing?
  2. What is the negative impact on my laptop?
link|improve this question
2  
Did you test the other laptops in the same outlet? this sounds like a grounding issue, either the outlet or something in the laptop is not properly grounded. – MaQleod Aug 17 '11 at 18:10
Agreeing with @MaQleod, also check this laptop in a different outlet, preferably in another building (in case there's a problem with your building's wiring). – CarlF Aug 17 '11 at 18:14
Yes, I am checking other laptops in same conditions. Only one of the laptop is showing current in VGA ports. – iSumitG Aug 17 '11 at 18:14
@CarlF If the PSU is 'double insulated' (no earth/ground bonding) then it is unlikely to be a building wiring fault unless there is a high voltage fault at the local substation - but then lightbulbs would be popping out of the sockets and all other electrical appliances in the fault zone would be freaking out/smoking/sparking etc. – Linker3000 Aug 17 '11 at 18:52
feedback

1 Answer

up vote 5 down vote accepted

It sounds like your laptop has issues with a ground, since the voltage on the VGA connector is floating high. You should not have gotten an electric shock, since nominal VGA signaling occurs at 0V and 0.7V. If possible, open the laptop, and try to see if any components are electrically shorted to the laptop chassis and/or other connectors.

If you only experience the shock when the charger is connected to the laptop, then you should stop using the charger immediately and get a new one. Check the charger itself for ground faults. If you are using an ungrounded charger, there may be an electrical fault in the actual socket. Start with the charger, and work from there.


Again, there is no voltage in the laptop which is high enough to shock you. I have not seen any laptop chargers provide a DC output higher then 18.5V. Look into the charger or any short circuits (either in the laptop or charger), but again, since you're getting shocked, ensure that your charger is not the problem.

link|improve this answer
I will take my laptop to the service center tomorrow. – iSumitG Aug 17 '11 at 18:22
@iSumitG does this only happen when the laptop is plugged in, or on battery power as well? – Breakthrough Aug 17 '11 at 18:29
Only when the charger is plugged in. When on battery, there is no current in VGA port. – iSumitG Aug 17 '11 at 18:30
3  
@iSumitG the laptop is not the problem. There is an issue with your charger, I would highly recommend that you don't use it for the time being. Is it a two-prong or three-prong charger? – Breakthrough Aug 17 '11 at 18:36
1  
Get a new charger for the laptop, and stop using that one immediately. If possible, try to get a new one with three prongs, so it is grounded. Without any further information, I can only tell you that there is an issue either with your charger, or your mains outlet. – Breakthrough Aug 17 '11 at 18:42
show 2 more comments
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.