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Old Dec 21, 2006, 02:08 PM   #1
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??? ? Ground Wires on Molex Connector (Reverseable?)

Hi,

Is there a difference between the two black ground wires on a drive
connector? For example, does one ground the 12v and the other ground
the 5v or do they both go to the same place? Is it bad if they are
reversed?


Thanks a lot.
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Old Dec 21, 2006, 02:49 PM   #2
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All ground wires are ground wires. Reversed or not, it won't make any difference.
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Old Dec 21, 2006, 03:34 PM   #3
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Well that's not entirely true. A ground wire for an oven receptical is not exactly equal to a ground wire for a bookmark light. I'm guessing that you meant in a computer though, but even then, there are different kinds of ground wires in a computer and I doubt that they can be mixed and matched arbitrarilly.
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Old Dec 21, 2006, 03:43 PM   #4
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while i can't claim any electric or psu knowledge at all really in this area.
synetech, you are right,

There are the grounds which just are a means for the positive to run through to negative being the ground, and then there is the positive to negative, and positive to negative supplemented with a ground.

Now in the DC world inside the machine, i'd suspect that most likely on a standard 4 pin molex, that either ground, would be able to be flipped around without worry. But i'm not sure about any of the others.

I've always been confused by the -5v and -12v rails that are marked on PSUs. Which by somewhat thinking about it, would seem that there would be wires that would be required to connect in the right way.

No? Not sure, where's a resident computer PSU expert when you need on... i'll post a link to this thread in the OCZ Support forum, perhaps one of them may have an answer for us.
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Old Dec 21, 2006, 03:46 PM   #5
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considering grace did not make any resemblance or remark to any oven or lighting system of any type..... the answer was given to the question you asked.(but you're point is understandable).

Of course she meant in computer (molex) terms.....the is no difference as far as i know (but i'm not 100% + on that)

besides that if the was any difference in the black ground wires it would simply be pointless having the same colour coded cable,surely these would be a seperate colour also.
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Old Dec 21, 2006, 04:09 PM   #6
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Mig, i've come across some PSU's where one black and one black with a white stripe are clearly visiable, making it clear that there "is" a difference? i haven't a clue though yet.

Haven't found anything on the net either, other then when chaning molexes or anything of the sort, to put everything back in the same position (making sure each is labled as clearly as possible)..
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Old Dec 21, 2006, 04:23 PM   #7
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Its all in the return to the neutral circuit of the AC plug.

It doesn't technically matter in most power supplies but in some older power supplies it did matter for purposes of eletrical noise and interference.
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Old Dec 21, 2006, 04:43 PM   #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Judas View Post
Mig, i've come across some PSU's where one black and one black with a white stripe are clearly visiable, making it clear that there "is" a difference? i haven't a clue though yet.
Judas all im going by is from what i have seen in the past,i personally have not had a single psu with any marking on one of the black ground cables and i have had a few in the past..I'm not tech minded like a huge number of the members here and i only said a small opinion on what i thought.... i also said i was not positive on the answer...but thanks for pointing it out.

even i flick through Wikipedia does not show the answer required.
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Old Dec 21, 2006, 05:47 PM   #9
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yeah.. it's an interesting question non the less....
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Old Dec 21, 2006, 05:55 PM   #10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Synetech View Post
Well that's not entirely true. A ground wire for an oven receptical is not exactly equal to a ground wire for a bookmark light. I'm guessing that you meant in a computer though, but even then, there are different kinds of ground wires in a computer and I doubt that they can be mixed and matched arbitrarilly.

We are talking about computer power supply units here, and even in your example the ground wires are the same. The latter is just not large enough to withstand the current of the oven, so it will probably get burned.

Especially in DC circuits, all ground/neutral cables are exactly the same. They just pass the voltage to the ground cable of the AC plug. You can match any voltage line to any ground wire as long as the cables are strong enough to withstand the current, which is not really a variable when talking about computer PSUs. Many PSUs actually gather all those small black cables in the casing and solder them into one ground point. As you can guess, since all cables originate from the same source, they do the exact same thing. And ground wires always do the exact same thing. I even have several MOLEX adapters here for various uses which I modified and have both ground wires soldered together instead of two separate wires on the female plug, so both the +5V and +12V are using a single ground wire of a given MOLEX.

All ground wires are the return lines of a voltage to the ground or the neutral/ground wire of the AC plug. There is nothing different about them and they do nothing more than what they are supposed to. They hardly ever matter about (only in high voltage industrial lines) or cause noise, ripple or anything else. It's simple electrics.

Think of the ground wire as an infinite 0 voltage line where you can plug any other voltage line at it to work. That's the simplest way to understand it. If that doesn't work, there are many alternatives like teachers, books and such. You shouldn't be making a fuss about something so simple. You can always use any ground wire for any power line, as long as it is strong enough to handle the power which will move through it.


PS. I have seen tens of hundreds of power supply units but I haven't ever seen a PSU with two different ground lines, and that technically sounds impossible as there is only one ground wire at the AC plug. If you can remember the manufacturer of that PSU, please let me know, I'd like to get one and check it out myself.

Last edited by Grace; Dec 21, 2006 at 06:01 PM.
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Old Dec 21, 2006, 06:05 PM   #11
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i wasn't refering to the AC plug... that's just a standard 3 pin plug.

i'm talking about the 2 black wires for a 4 pin molex that say connects to the cd-rom drive...

I've seen some with black, one of which has a different color or white stripe. Perhaps for manufacturers own references? haven't a clue... i'll have to dig through a few things and see, but i beleive it was in a dell machine i had come across that.
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Old Dec 21, 2006, 07:58 PM   #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Judas View Post
i wasn't refering to the AC plug... that's just a standard 3 pin plug.

i'm talking about the 2 black wires for a 4 pin molex that say connects to the cd-rom drive...

I've seen some with black, one of which has a different color or white stripe. Perhaps for manufacturers own references? haven't a clue... i'll have to dig through a few things and see, but i beleive it was in a dell machine i had come across that.
I didn't say otherwise. I said it's impossible to have two different ground points in a PSU when the AC plug has one to offer. They will end up to one ground point anyway.

I just want to know which ones are those with the white stripe or different colors. As I said previously, I've seen thousands of power supply units and none had different ground wires. If you remember which manufacturer/model that was, I would like to know in order to ask them myself.

I have seen Dell reference power supply units, they were pretty normal.
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Old Dec 21, 2006, 08:51 PM   #13
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yeah... all the dells i've seen have had normal ones... which leads me to beleive that this psu i had found was not a typical dell psu (even though most of the dell psu are non standard size)....

If i can find it again i'll post it.
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Old Dec 21, 2006, 10:45 PM   #14
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not sure if this helps answering any of the questions.

below information, which is stated in the DC output / Grounding section of the EPS12V power supply design guide (don't see this information in the ATX12V ones).

"The ground of the pins of the power supply wire harness provides the power return path.
The wire harness ground pins shall be connected to safety ground (power supply enclosure)."
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Old Dec 22, 2006, 02:52 AM   #15
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Grace View Post
Many PSUs actually gather all those small black cables in the casing and solder them into one ground point. As you can guess, since all cables originate from the same source, they do the exact same thing. And ground wires always do the exact same thing. I even have several MOLEX adapters here for various uses which I modified and have both ground wires soldered together instead of two separate wires on the female plug, so both the +5V and +12V are using a single ground wire of a given MOLEX.
That's what I was hoping for. Someone else said the same thing earlier today and I said that it begs the question why there's two then.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Grace View Post
All ground wires are the return lines of a voltage to the ground or the neutral/ground wire of the AC plug. There is nothing different about them and they do nothing more than what they are supposed to. They hardly ever matter about (only in high voltage industrial lines) or cause noise, ripple or anything else. It's simple electrics.
It's not necessarily just high-voltage that would make a difference; you could burn out a microscopic ground wire (like the kind in a die) on even a fan (probably even an LED).

Quote:
Originally Posted by Grace View Post
I didn't say otherwise. I said it's impossible to have two different ground points in a PSU when the AC plug has one to offer. They will end up to one ground point anyway.

I just want to know which ones are those with the white stripe or different colors. As I said previously, I've seen thousands of power supply units and none had different ground wires. If you remember which manufacturer/model that was, I would like to know in order to ask them myself.

I have seen Dell reference power supply units, they were pretty normal.
You've probably already seen it but this site has a lot of details on power connectors.


Anyway, thanks for the input everyone; I just wanted some peace of mind that I wouldn't fry my drives. I have to replace the PSU eventually anyway. In fact that's why I removed the plastic from the connectors today, to add some solder to support the connections because my drives have been intermittently clicking off and on for a while and it's driving me nuts. Some of the wires in there were a bit frayed (I guess I manhandled them a bit too much) so the power wasn't getting to them properly. My optical drives have the same problem which is why I want to change the sucky PSU—it came with the case. I figured I'd get off my butt and take care of it once and for all before any permanent damage is done to the drives. They've been good all day but I'll have to test them tomorrow by wiggling the wires while the system's on.
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Old Dec 22, 2006, 06:20 AM   #16
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Quote:
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That's what I was hoping for. Someone else said the same thing earlier today and I said that it begs the question why there's two then.
The MOLEX is a pretty old design. There are two of them because each cable can withstand a given current and power, not infinite. If both voltage lines are connected to a single ground wire, that ground wire has to withstand the power and current of both those two voltage lines. It was designed like this for safety reasons mostly, since earlier units had wires which were working pretty close to specification limits. Today, an average PSU copper wire can withstand 3 to 30 times the maximum power and current a component can draw (with the worst case being a 150W+ CPU taking power from two 12V wires, 4-pin 12V Intel spec connector, that's 75W per line, the wire can withstand about 200W).

Of course even today the manufacturers have to follow specifications, so the maximum current of a single 12V wire is set to be 12A. The wire itself however can handle at least 18-20A. It is all about safety precautions.

Quote:
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It's not necessarily just high-voltage that would make a difference; you could burn out a microscopic ground wire (like the kind in a die) on even a fan (probably even an LED).
Of course you could. If you have that fan cable ground more than 100-150W of power, it will most probably get burned. But a single fan ground wire can be used for up to like...6-10 fans. The voltage is irrelevant, the current is what we actually care about. You can have 20.000V with 0.00001A current, that's a minimal amount of power.
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Old Dec 23, 2006, 01:17 PM   #17
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Grace View Post
The MOLEX is a pretty old design…
It's interesting you would mention that because just the other day I was reading an article in a trade paper about how desktop computers have plateaued and are moving forward very slowly compared to other types of consumer electronics.


Quote:
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Of course you could. If you have that fan cable ground more than 100-150W of power, it will most probably get burned. But a single fan ground wire can be used for up to like...6-10 fans. The voltage is irrelevant, the current is what we actually care about. You can have 20.000V with 0.00001A current, that's a minimal amount of power.
I said a wire on a die—those microscopic filaments in a CPU—not a fan ground wire. I don't have the numbers but I'm sure that a motor could burn one of those.
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Old Dec 23, 2006, 01:45 PM   #18
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I said a wire on a die—those microscopic filaments in a CPU—not a fan ground wire. I don't have the numbers but I'm sure that a motor could burn one of those.

True, I misread, you said 'on even a fan' and I read 'or even a fan'.

Actually, pipelines can take quite an amount of power, depending on their use and design of course. Remember, most of the power inside a PSU is transfered between the components via pipelines before it actually reach the cables.
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Old Dec 24, 2006, 01:44 PM   #19
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The two ground wires in a molex, most likely end up connected to the same ground point in the PSU and the same ground PCB land on the drive.

As for the -V lines, the only place they go to is the ATX power connector, and on modern boards, they don't do much. Back in the old days, the 640k of D-RAM ("enough for anyone") may have been a type which needed negative voltages as well as positive, but now very few parts (if any) would require negative supplies - serial ports, if not equipped with a voltage converter.
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Old Dec 26, 2006, 01:58 PM   #20
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ATX 1.3 abolished most negative rails, including the legacy ISA -5V rail.

BTW Grace you said the ground in a DC circuit passed the potential difference to the ground plug of the AC circuit... which isn't true, in PC PSU's it goes to the neutral side (at least in North America where its 120V hot and then the neutral and then the ground), if it was passing that to the ground you'd have an overloaded ground line and not enough return current on the netural side.
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Old Dec 26, 2006, 02:13 PM   #21
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