soupy1957
Mechanical
- Nov 23, 2005
- 23
I'm a QC Tech for a Communications Equipment Assembly plant in Connecticut, responsible for the ESD Training Program, which I've been teaching for a while now.
Recently a question was raised that begged an answer that I am unsure of:
Employees who are working at a properly designed ESD Workstation, who are wearing their wrist straps and ankle straps, can still accumulate electrical charges on their body?
Although I tend to agree that additional ESD potential can still be possible:
1. Doesn't this imply that our wrist straps and ankle
straps are inferior, or at the very least insufficient
with regard to truly "grounding" the employee?
2. Wouldn't this be a good justification for Ionizers
even if they ARE $800.00 a pop?
3. Shouldn't there be an additional effort to ground
any of the computers, analyzers, meters, electric
screwdrivers, etc..beyond just having them plugged
into the common ground?
Suggestions, ideas, imput??????
-soupy1957
Recently a question was raised that begged an answer that I am unsure of:
Employees who are working at a properly designed ESD Workstation, who are wearing their wrist straps and ankle straps, can still accumulate electrical charges on their body?
Although I tend to agree that additional ESD potential can still be possible:
1. Doesn't this imply that our wrist straps and ankle
straps are inferior, or at the very least insufficient
with regard to truly "grounding" the employee?
2. Wouldn't this be a good justification for Ionizers
even if they ARE $800.00 a pop?
3. Shouldn't there be an additional effort to ground
any of the computers, analyzers, meters, electric
screwdrivers, etc..beyond just having them plugged
into the common ground?
Suggestions, ideas, imput??????
-soupy1957