Electronics Forum | Wed Oct 20 07:57:18 EDT 2004 | Grayman
Rob, Thank you for your info. Appreciated it very much. it will help. Arman
Electronics Forum | Tue Apr 19 09:16:42 EDT 2005 | russ
Anybody out there heard of or using these things? Do they work?
Electronics Forum | Tue Apr 19 14:44:12 EDT 2005 | russ
Thanks Dave. I figured as much, anyway thanks for the ESD resource also.
Electronics Forum | Tue Apr 19 15:09:17 EDT 2005 | pr
I'm going with the hair gel!
Electronics Forum | Tue Apr 19 22:06:43 EDT 2005 | davef
Me too http://slickville.com/sections/residents/dannyboy/dannyboy_menu.html
Electronics Forum | Tue Oct 19 08:07:49 EDT 2004 | Grayman
Hi all, Based on the data from the website the wireless wrist strap is a fake device!!! Wow! can you give me companies who promote these kind of product in your area? Maybe they can provide us much more details on why they still sell this type of pr
Electronics Forum | Tue Feb 21 07:50:29 EST 2006 | Rizza
I'm also looking at this wireless wrist strap. try this website: http://www.esdjournal.com/techpapr/sfowler/wireless.htm for the evaluation of this strap.. well now..im looking for alternative that works the same in convenience but different in princ
Electronics Forum | Fri Apr 22 16:53:37 EDT 2005 | rsmith@z-mar.com
Wrist straps are used to bring the operator to ground potential which is the same potential as the dissipative worksurface and the electronic device which is on the bench. Everything must be at the same elctrical potential. Wireless straps will not d
Electronics Forum | Tue Oct 19 09:26:51 EDT 2004 | HOSS
Arman, We introduced wireless wrist straps here on a small scale for safety related jobs such as mass lead trimming. These straps operate by the "Corona" effect which, as it turns out amounts to this: You need to drink a case of that swill to conv
Electronics Forum | Tue Oct 19 13:35:22 EDT 2004 | marc
Seeing a product such as this and thinking about simple engineering. Every lightning rod I have ever seen on a building, home, tower, etc... had this long metal device called a "conductive wire" that runs into the ground. I'll stick with the ligh