- Joined
- Jan 22, 2007
- Messages
- 1,641
Please don't take this as a sarcastic comment. I am making it as a literal comment, not sarcastic. OK?
The problem isn't the tool; It's the human. You are the ungrounded link spanning a static generator. If you want to eliminate the problem, you have to fix the human. (Yes, I know that is prime for sarcasm. [big grin]) Throw a wrist strap on and tie yourself into the grounded vac hose.
The problem is that there will always be a huge static voltage difference somewhere between the source (sheet of MDF) and the drain (CT Vac). All you can do is relocate where this difference exists. Right now, this difference is located at the operator's (right hand) location. When you were using a non-anti-static hose, the difference was located in that hose. (You don't get shocked while using the saw, but would get a huge shock the instant you touched something else.)
However, keep in mind that even with the wrist strap, the difference isn't eliminated. It just moves from your right hand to your left hand, where it is less likely to find a quick place to jump (because the MDF sheet doesn't have a tightly concentrated charge in a small location).
Think of static as a waterfall (or water pump). The static charge (aka water) is being moved from one height to another. Above and below the waterfall (or water pump if you prefer) the stream is flowing on level ground. At the waterfall (or pump) the water makes a huge jump in height. You can't change the height of the waterfall. You can only push it upstream or downstream from one location to another.
Granted, using the same analogy, the non-anti-static hose will change the steep waterfall into a longer flowing rapids (the length of the hose) instead of a straight drop off.
The problem isn't the tool; It's the human. You are the ungrounded link spanning a static generator. If you want to eliminate the problem, you have to fix the human. (Yes, I know that is prime for sarcasm. [big grin]) Throw a wrist strap on and tie yourself into the grounded vac hose.
The problem is that there will always be a huge static voltage difference somewhere between the source (sheet of MDF) and the drain (CT Vac). All you can do is relocate where this difference exists. Right now, this difference is located at the operator's (right hand) location. When you were using a non-anti-static hose, the difference was located in that hose. (You don't get shocked while using the saw, but would get a huge shock the instant you touched something else.)
However, keep in mind that even with the wrist strap, the difference isn't eliminated. It just moves from your right hand to your left hand, where it is less likely to find a quick place to jump (because the MDF sheet doesn't have a tightly concentrated charge in a small location).
Think of static as a waterfall (or water pump). The static charge (aka water) is being moved from one height to another. Above and below the waterfall (or water pump if you prefer) the stream is flowing on level ground. At the waterfall (or pump) the water makes a huge jump in height. You can't change the height of the waterfall. You can only push it upstream or downstream from one location to another.
Granted, using the same analogy, the non-anti-static hose will change the steep waterfall into a longer flowing rapids (the length of the hose) instead of a straight drop off.