I think the nuetral is about 1 V above ground or so. I'm not to worried
about scewing up my sound card all that much to tell you the truth... its a
POS anyways... I'm more worried about screwing up my computer but I feel
save that the sound card would prevent that(atleast I hope).
Well, I don't have an isolation transformer so I don't know how to do
this... I brought a lot of stuff but not nearly enough it seems. Just
trying to get into some projects(such as building a PS with some cheap
transformers I brought) and would like to see the output(so atleast I have
some idea whats going on).... I don't like poking around with a DMM to much.
You would probably see about the same waveform if you used a $5000
oscilloscope single-ended and tied the ground to neutral. The 1 volt or so
from neutral to ground has a lot of power behind it and is mostly noise. You
can see the noise by connecting your sound card input from neutral to
ground. This signal will be added to the true waveform. A simple cheap
isolation transformer would be a Wall-Wort with AC output, or break open a
DC type and remove the rectifiers. However, power transformers usually run
near saturation, so you will see the clipping at close to rated voltage, but
if you run the variac down the waveform should clear up.
If you have stereo input on the sound card you could try making a
differential input oscilloscope, and display the difference in the two
signals. You would need to make sure the external voltage dividers have
exactly the same ratio, but that should work fine.
I have a specialized product that is essentially a high-accuracy AC current
meter. You are welcome to download the demo and other information on my web
page
www.Ortmaster.com. For background info see my main website.
I had considered using a sound card for my application, but I'm not sure if
the accuracy and sensitivity is good enough. I have a special PC board with
an instrumentation amp, PGA from 1x to 200x, and a 10 bit A/D on a PIC. It
communicates with the PC on a serial port at 57.6 kBaud for 2400 samples per
second. Lowest range is about 5 mV FS, resolution about 5 uV. The parts cost
is probably only about $20.
Good luck, and play it safe!