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- From: schuch@phx.mcd.mot.com (John Schuch)
- Subject: Re: Those Anti-Static Mats
- Message-ID: <1993Jan11.181155.10735@phx.mcd.mot.com>
- Sender: news@phx.mcd.mot.com
- Nntp-Posting-Host: bopper2.phx.mcd.mot.com
- Organization: Motorola Computer Group, Tempe, Az.
- References: <C0nyI5.MG2.2@cs.cmu.edu>
- Date: Mon, 11 Jan 1993 18:11:55 GMT
- Lines: 53
-
- In article <C0nyI5.MG2.2@cs.cmu.edu> rwc@ius4.ius.cs.cmu.edu (Randy Casciola) writes:
- >
- >I just bought one of those cheap anti-static mats at a computer
- >......
- >Well, when I held
- >the leads against the mat and pressed firmly at a distance of
- >about 1 cm, the resistance was greater than the highest range on
- >the DVM ( >20M ohms).
-
- We have a special tester to determine the conductivity of the static
- mats around our plant. What you need to remember is that the mats are
- "static dissipative", not conductive. Dissipative is defined as being
- between 10E5 and 10E11 ohms per square inch. Most of the mats around
- here are about 10E7, or 100 Mohms per sq inch. The tester has two
- conductive bars which are placed on the mat. 100 volts is applied to
- one and the current between them is measured to determine resistance.
- Remember, the charge your trying to get rid of is thousands of volts,
- not tens of volts.
-
- >And the resistance from one end of the
- >ground cord to the other was about 1M ohm. I assume they have
- >a 1M ohm resistor in series somewhere.
-
- Yes, there is usually a 1 meg resistor in the ground lead. That's so
- there's no high-current ground path, which could be a real 'pain' if
- you are working a high voltages and get across the wrong wire.
-
- >I measured the
- >resistance of another more expensive mat (the type designed to
- >be placed on the floor for you to walk on) and at 25 cm of
- >distance between the leads I measured about 20k ohms.
-
- Floor mats are supposed to be at ground potential so they are
- CONDUCTIVE, not dissipative. They are usually hard grounded,
- without the 1 Mohm current limiting resistor. They should be
- used with 'shoe straps'. These basically ground your ankel to
- the floor. The strap has the 1 Mohm resistor and has to be tested
- often. Around here, you are supposed to test you straps every
- time you enter the production area.
-
-
-
- John
-
- "ESD dosen't really exist. It was invented by the 3M marketing
- department as a way to move conductive plastics." :-)
-
-
- --
- +--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | John R. Schuch - Motorola Computer Group - Manufacturing Engineering |
- | N7XVS - schuch@phx.mcd.mot.com - (602) 438-3008 - CompuServe: 70733.3330 |
- +--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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