Re: Static electricity problem
- From: David Maynard <nospam@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 07 Dec 2005 23:10:45 -0600
w_tom wrote:
You have the right idea. But static electricity is not seeking earth ground. Earthing is not part of a static electric discharge circuit. Somehow your body discharge is forming a complete circuit through computer. This is why motherboards are often mounted on chassis plate with only one ground interconnect.
Modern motherboards never have 'one ground connect' unless one goes through gyrations to defeat the built-in grounding scheme.
If the static current discharge was
using motherboard copper traces as part of its path (due to
multiple connections to chassis plate), then ICs on that
motherboard are seeing voltage differences across the board. These tenths of volts difference between ground pins on ICs
cause software crashes.
Other paths can also exist. One might be through keyboard, into computer, down safety ground wire, through latex wall paint, into floor, and back to you. Another example of a complete circuit.
Going to be a bitch getting his charge to fly through the air from his *wireless keyboard* to the computer.
Not to mention that charge takes the path of least resistance and across the room and back through floors and latex wall paint ain't it.
You have the right idea. We want sufficient humidity and wrist straps connected to chassis when ever anyone works on electronics. BTW, same can even apply to a digital camera when connected or disconnected via USB port. It is also why we prefer cotton (or better is polyester cotton) instead of nylon.
Insulating, absorbing, or blocking such transients (be it static electricity or the one outside called lightning) is a fool's errand. We start by making the transient not generated AND make conductive paths to shunt (divert, discharge, redirect) that transient on paths that are not destructive.
Sold are special conductive plastic mats for desktop and for floor that are better electrical conductors specifically to discharge static electricity. Even provided with connector and wire to complete the discharge circuits.
This is but another example of why we want a single point
ground - be it to remove hum in a stereo, static electric
discharge to computer, or lightning strike to a building. Ground loops through wrong things cause failures.
I'm still waiting for you to tell me where the 'single point earth' is in aircraft.
-Lone_Wolf- wrote:
Recently (since the humidity has dropped around here), I have had a problem with my latest machine.
Whenever my long haired cat rubs up against my legs my PC instantly powers off and reboots (even though I may be no where near the PC - note I use wireless keyboard and mouse). I am assuming its because the box is sitting on top of the plastic floor mat and the charge is running down my leg, into the mat, and then through the PC to the ground in the house wiring. So far it has not hurt anything and I have not lost any important work, but I do need to stop this from happening.
Moving the box is out of the question due to space constraints but I could try to insulate it from the mat better. I have also considered riveting a grounding cable to the mat and running it directly to the ground line in the house wiring.
Could I have missed something in my installation of the motherboard that is not correctly protecting the board?
John
.
- References:
- Static electricity problem
- From: -Lone_Wolf-
- Re: Static electricity problem
- From: w_tom
- Static electricity problem
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