Anti-Static Grounding - how?

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Anti-Static Grounding - how?

Fred (FL)

I've seen a lot of "anti-hazard" warnings here and
there for our K2 building process.  Various outfits
sell anti-static pads, wrist straps, wrist straps
with series megohm protection - but none ever
mention where these devices are supposed to pick
up a reliable earth ground?  Or don't they
need one?   I don't think one can rely on their
house wiring to find a reliable un-connected earth
ground.

...building K2 # 5422, control board finished and
Front Panel on desk in a pile of parts.  :)

Tnx 73's
Fred N3CSY
3/21

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RE: Anti-Static Grounding - how?

Ron D'Eau Claire-2
Fred, N3CSY wrote:

Various outfits
sell anti-static pads, wrist straps, wrist straps
with series megohm protection - but none ever
mention where these devices are supposed to pick
up a reliable earth ground?  Or don't they
need one?   I don't think one can rely on their
house wiring to find a reliable un-connected earth
ground.

-----------------------------------

I use the power mains safety ground. All of the electronics lab benches I've
used in various companies rely on the mains ground.

If you are unsure of your mains ground, you can buy a very inexpensive
outlet tester at most hardware stores. It'll tell you whether your outlet
safety ground is connected and whether the outlet is wired correctly. The
latter can be important if you have any two-wire equipment that does not use
the safety ground.

Ron AC7AC

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Re: Anti-Static Grounding - how?

Stuart Rohre
What you are seeking rather than an earth ground, is to tie the commons of
the equipment you are working upon, and yourself, suitably protected by the
wrist strap internal resistor, to the same point, and thus voltage
potential.  You are trying to have everything at the same potential before
you reach toward a board with a conductive tool and provide a discharge
point for any accumulated static on one side or the other.

The objective is to bleed off any static charge you bring on your body,
clothes, etc.,  to the work table, to the static mat and to the common bus
of the circuit board, chassis, or whatever is sitting on the pad.  In other
words, it matters not if the pad and you and the equipment float at some
voltage, as long as you all become tied together so as to be at the SAME
voltage.  That is why you do not see any specific instruction to tie the mat
to an earth rod.
If you walk up to the work area and thus buildup a charge from walking
along; as soon as you strap on the resistive wrist strap tying you to the
other equipment, you dissipate the charge thru the resistor or induce the
same charge to whatever you are working upon.

The earth itself does not have any magical property to effectively nullify
static; rather, you attempt to spread the charge evenly among all conductive
elements involved in your workbench.  Sometimes earthing thru a rod might
aid in keeping the bench from rising up in charge itself, but the risk of
that is tied to such issues as is there a steady wind blowing across metal
surfaces, or is the air around the bench very dry and cool, thus
facilitating static charge accumulation.

-Stuart
K5KVH



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Re: Anti-Static Grounding - how?

Stuart Rohre
In reply to this post by Fred (FL)
Indeed, some house grounds have induced voltages in having long runs back to
any ground point; and might not be the safest thing to tie your static mat
to as a "ground" point.  "Ground" in AC systems may have imbalance phase
currents and be much different from a zero voltage point.  It shouldn't
ideally, but the real world resistances of wiring carrying heavy current my
make it so.

-Stuart
K5KVH



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Re: Anti-Static Grounding - how?

Nigel A. Gunn G8IFF/KC8NHF
In reply to this post by Fred (FL)
They don't need one.
The idea is to keep you, your tools,  the equipment your working on  and
your PSU, antenna, test equipment etc at the same potential. It doesn't
matter what that potential. Your mains electricity supply ground is
certainly sufficient as most things will already be connected to it.


F and J wrote:

> I've seen a lot of "anti-hazard" warnings here and
> there for our K2 building process.  Various outfits
> sell anti-static pads, wrist straps, wrist straps
> with series megohm protection - but none ever
> mention where these devices are supposed to pick
> up a reliable earth ground?  Or don't they
> need one?   I don't think one can rely on their
> house wiring to find a reliable un-connected earth
> ground.
>
> ...building K2 # 5422, control board finished and
> Front Panel on desk in a pile of parts.  :)
>
> Tnx 73's
> Fred N3CSY
> 3/21
>
>
>
>  

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RE: Anti-Static Grounding - how?

Rich Lentz
In reply to this post by Stuart Rohre
That 1 meg resistor not only causes a slow discharge of any static buildup
on you it also protects you. You could easily get a good zap by connecting
yourself with a solid wire to what you think is "ground."  Don’t think that
you can save money by hooking up a test lead to your wrist watch band and
ground. I got a good jolt when I was a kid (many years ago) from a
"grounded" drill that was plugged into a "grounded" outlet in my barn.  The
power line had the Hot, Neutral and Ground BUT there was no local ground rod
in the barn. At first we thought that the Hot wire had shorted to the case.
As luck would have it the fuse panel ground had gotten mowed off below the
meter, the only ground for the house and barn, and the utility crew forget
to ground the transformer after an accident some months earlier. There was
enough voltage to light a bulb, over 90 volts, between the "ground" wire and
earth.

Rich,
KE0X

-----------
Indeed, some house grounds have induced voltages in having long runs back to
any ground point; and might not be the safest thing to tie your static mat
to as a "ground" point.  "Ground" in AC systems may have imbalance phase
currents and be much different from a zero voltage point.  It shouldn't
ideally, but the real world resistances of wiring carrying heavy current my
make it so.

-Stuart
K5KVH




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RE: Anti-Static Grounding - how?

Rich Lentz
In reply to this post by Fred (FL)
 


That 1 meg resistor not only causes a slow discharge of any static buildup
on you it also protects you. You could easily get a good zap by connecting
yourself with a solid wire to what you think is "ground."  Don’t think that
you can save money by hooking up a test lead to your wrist watch band and
ground. I got a good jolt when I was a kid (many years ago) from a
"grounded" drill that was plugged into a "grounded" outlet in my barn.  The
power line had the Hot, Neutral and Ground BUT there was no local ground rod
in the barn. At first we thought that the Hot wire had shorted to the case.
As luck would have it the fuse panel ground had gotten mowed off below the
meter, the only ground for the house and barn, and the utility crew forget
to ground the transformer after an accident some months earlier. There was
enough voltage to light a bulb, over 90 volts, between the "ground" wire and
earth.

Rich,
KE0X

-----------
Indeed, some house grounds have induced voltages in having long runs back to
any ground point; and might not be the safest thing to tie your static mat
to as a "ground" point.  "Ground" in AC systems may have imbalance phase
currents and be much different from a zero voltage point.  It shouldn't
ideally, but the real world resistances of wiring carrying heavy current my
make it so.

-Stuart
K5KVH





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