JC Denton
DIY
So I've recently purchased an ionizer from Walmart... going to withhold the name for now.
Since I started using it I've experienced many strange electrical phenomena. I've done a ton of troubleshooting, and narrowed it down to the device itself. I was tempted to try a different wall wart, but the manual specifically stated not to do that, and it's still under warranty. Normally I'd just get it exchanged and be done with it... but I'm now 100% sure it's what destroyed at least $200 worth of electronics, as well as possible damage to my PC and various other equipment. It's even gotten me electrocuted just trying to unplug it.
I was pulling my hair out trying to figure out the cause. Thought it was something more serious like mice chewed up the wires in my walls or a short circuit somewhere. This ionizer which draws less than 4 watts was the last thing I suspected. The manual even has an "important note" that the device was designed specifically for use around computer systems and other sensitive electronics, and unlike other ionizers it won't damage or interfere with them. Yet the one I got just radically wreaks havoc on electronics or basically anything that conducts or even just semiconducts lol
Aside from making dust settle, it seems to do the exact opposite of what an ionizer should do. Instead of neutralizing/dissipating static, it generates an insane amount of it. This is normal if you touch it, but this effect actually extends over a wide area. It's not as bad in the far corner of the room, but still an issue. I was constantly getting zapped by my keyboard and monitor stand. It also builds up in skin, so anything I touch after just being near the ionizer for less than a minute would get zapped with some nasty ESD.
At first I thought it was just dry air/skin, and started running an ultrasonic humidifier. Didn't help, and the wall wart crapped out after a few days. I'm guessing some IC got fried with ESD. Same thing happened with a replacement medical-grade power supply which wasn't even plugged in on the same circuit, though near it on a different shelf. I guess the ionizer got jealous lol
Up closer, it's like literally all conductive surfaces are electrified... Wall warts, surge protectors, outlets, buttons on my echo dot, even battery-powered devices... and I'm not exaggerating when I say electrified. It's literally like theirs current flowing out. The only way to shut it off is the circuit breaker.
That's not even the worst of it.
This electrostatic charge or whatever it is, not only radiates and couples with all nearby insulated or uninsulated conductive surfaces, but appears to builds up in mains, and then violently discharges into whatever is plugged into any outlet on the circuit - visible & audible as huge sparks of inrush current - usually destroying it, sometimes even flipping the breaker. It's even made a wall-mount surge protector burst into flames right as I plugged it in. This happens regardless of whether it's plugged into the same circuit, so it's probably not leakage current (adapter is ungrounded). It's definitely some sort of radiated emission or electrostatic coupling. The "emitter" appears to have st. Elmo's light on it's tip, if that's indication of anything.
I can go into more detail, but I think I'll stop there for now. My questions are:
Why the hell is this ionizer behaving more like some malfunctioning tesla coil?
If a device I purchased turned out to be hazardously defective, who would be liable? The reseller or the manufacturer?
This effect is reliably reproducible, and I've documented everything with pictures. Should I sue them?
Since I started using it I've experienced many strange electrical phenomena. I've done a ton of troubleshooting, and narrowed it down to the device itself. I was tempted to try a different wall wart, but the manual specifically stated not to do that, and it's still under warranty. Normally I'd just get it exchanged and be done with it... but I'm now 100% sure it's what destroyed at least $200 worth of electronics, as well as possible damage to my PC and various other equipment. It's even gotten me electrocuted just trying to unplug it.
I was pulling my hair out trying to figure out the cause. Thought it was something more serious like mice chewed up the wires in my walls or a short circuit somewhere. This ionizer which draws less than 4 watts was the last thing I suspected. The manual even has an "important note" that the device was designed specifically for use around computer systems and other sensitive electronics, and unlike other ionizers it won't damage or interfere with them. Yet the one I got just radically wreaks havoc on electronics or basically anything that conducts or even just semiconducts lol
Aside from making dust settle, it seems to do the exact opposite of what an ionizer should do. Instead of neutralizing/dissipating static, it generates an insane amount of it. This is normal if you touch it, but this effect actually extends over a wide area. It's not as bad in the far corner of the room, but still an issue. I was constantly getting zapped by my keyboard and monitor stand. It also builds up in skin, so anything I touch after just being near the ionizer for less than a minute would get zapped with some nasty ESD.
At first I thought it was just dry air/skin, and started running an ultrasonic humidifier. Didn't help, and the wall wart crapped out after a few days. I'm guessing some IC got fried with ESD. Same thing happened with a replacement medical-grade power supply which wasn't even plugged in on the same circuit, though near it on a different shelf. I guess the ionizer got jealous lol
Up closer, it's like literally all conductive surfaces are electrified... Wall warts, surge protectors, outlets, buttons on my echo dot, even battery-powered devices... and I'm not exaggerating when I say electrified. It's literally like theirs current flowing out. The only way to shut it off is the circuit breaker.
That's not even the worst of it.
This electrostatic charge or whatever it is, not only radiates and couples with all nearby insulated or uninsulated conductive surfaces, but appears to builds up in mains, and then violently discharges into whatever is plugged into any outlet on the circuit - visible & audible as huge sparks of inrush current - usually destroying it, sometimes even flipping the breaker. It's even made a wall-mount surge protector burst into flames right as I plugged it in. This happens regardless of whether it's plugged into the same circuit, so it's probably not leakage current (adapter is ungrounded). It's definitely some sort of radiated emission or electrostatic coupling. The "emitter" appears to have st. Elmo's light on it's tip, if that's indication of anything.
I can go into more detail, but I think I'll stop there for now. My questions are:
Why the hell is this ionizer behaving more like some malfunctioning tesla coil?
If a device I purchased turned out to be hazardously defective, who would be liable? The reseller or the manufacturer?
This effect is reliably reproducible, and I've documented everything with pictures. Should I sue them?
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