- #1
Lennard
- 1
- 0
- TL;DR Summary
- Just installed electric mattress pad - now I get a tingling sensation when touching my partner
I've recently bought an electric mattress pad for my girlfriend. It has 4 separate heating zones (body and feet) and 2 controllers with a 2 plugs (not grounded - standard 2 prong EU plug). We turned it on and finally enjoyed a already warm bed when going to bed.
Only problem: once we turned both sides off, we felt a tingling/vibrating sensation when touching each other (similar to that when touching a plugged-in macbook). I knew that it probably was some harmless capacitive effect, but still felt a bit scared. I unplugged one side and the feeling went away. I decided to sleep and investigate later.
After some research this is my hypothesis:
I guess the mattress cover only switches one wire, so that the heating element is still connected to the outlet. I guess that by chance my partners side of the blanked was plugged in the other way around, so that the sides of the bed act like capacitive plates going from line (L) to neutral (N). In this case we were the dielectric material, so when we touched there was a small discharge 50 times per second (or 100 to be precise).
When I get home I want to do some investigation and see what really is going on here. I would appreciate any tips on how to go about this. All I have is a very basic multimeter.
Only problem: once we turned both sides off, we felt a tingling/vibrating sensation when touching each other (similar to that when touching a plugged-in macbook). I knew that it probably was some harmless capacitive effect, but still felt a bit scared. I unplugged one side and the feeling went away. I decided to sleep and investigate later.
After some research this is my hypothesis:
I guess the mattress cover only switches one wire, so that the heating element is still connected to the outlet. I guess that by chance my partners side of the blanked was plugged in the other way around, so that the sides of the bed act like capacitive plates going from line (L) to neutral (N). In this case we were the dielectric material, so when we touched there was a small discharge 50 times per second (or 100 to be precise).
When I get home I want to do some investigation and see what really is going on here. I would appreciate any tips on how to go about this. All I have is a very basic multimeter.