@breakfast & @guryhwa
I've got a system in the Logic Supply MC600 running an ArchDemon PSU I bought from Guryhwa.
It's got an ASRock Z97E ITX/ac motherboard, an i7-4790K with a Noctua NH-L9i, 16GB of RAM, a Transcend M.2 SSD, and a Galax GTX 1070.
As far as I know, I've assembled everything correctly. When the unit is connected to the modified 400W Dell AC/DC PSU I got from Guryhwa (along with the DC-ATX unit), the chassis becomes charged enough to give me a tingling feeling wherever I touch it. I have not powered the system on, as I touched the case and got shocked and took that as a PRETTY BAD SIGN.
The system was unplugged from wall power, and (I guess) there was still enough charge coming from the power brick for the case to give me another tingly shock, so I grabbed a shoe to help push against the case and remove the AC/DC brick from the DC-ATX plug (it was joined so snugly I couldn't get it out with just one hand on the connector), and now the system is sitting on my desk unplugged.
The shocks are rather minor and I'm uninjured--I'd compare them to what I'd get while working inside of telephone crossboxes in the rain for AT&T.
Where should I be looking to diagnose the source of this issue?
I've got a system in the Logic Supply MC600 running an ArchDemon PSU I bought from Guryhwa.
It's got an ASRock Z97E ITX/ac motherboard, an i7-4790K with a Noctua NH-L9i, 16GB of RAM, a Transcend M.2 SSD, and a Galax GTX 1070.
As far as I know, I've assembled everything correctly. When the unit is connected to the modified 400W Dell AC/DC PSU I got from Guryhwa (along with the DC-ATX unit), the chassis becomes charged enough to give me a tingling feeling wherever I touch it. I have not powered the system on, as I touched the case and got shocked and took that as a PRETTY BAD SIGN.
The system was unplugged from wall power, and (I guess) there was still enough charge coming from the power brick for the case to give me another tingly shock, so I grabbed a shoe to help push against the case and remove the AC/DC brick from the DC-ATX plug (it was joined so snugly I couldn't get it out with just one hand on the connector), and now the system is sitting on my desk unplugged.
The shocks are rather minor and I'm uninjured--I'd compare them to what I'd get while working inside of telephone crossboxes in the rain for AT&T.
Where should I be looking to diagnose the source of this issue?
- Do I need to do anything special (use certain washers) to attach my motherboard to the MC600's motherboard 'tray' risers?
- I had to use a dremel to open up my serial port enough to allow the G-Unique's power connector to fit through the MC600's serial port... I didn't do anything to the PSU's connector itself, so I don't feel like this could/should be the source of the problem?
- I don't know where else this problem could be coming from?