Thursday 16 April 2015

Make An Antistatic Wristband

Static electricity follows the path of least resistance.


Anti-static wristbands are a handy helper to have while working on sensitive electronic components (Reference 1). The wristband diverts the static electricity that naturally builds up in your body from whatever you are touching and grounds you. It works in the same way that a lightening rod grounds your home. The static that would normally exit your body via your fingertips, effectively shorting out the electronic equipment you are working on, is instead attracted to the metal on the wristband, following the path of least resistance down the provided wire and away from your work (Reference 2).


Instructions


1. Strip bare a few inches of the insulated wire to expose the wire beneath.


2. Attach one end of the wire to the rubber band. The wire must have solid contact with your skin in order for the wristband to work. The simplest method is to loop the wire once or twice around the rubber band and then secure it to itself by twisting the end back around itself behind the band.


3. Attach the opposite end of the wire to the alligator clip. Electrical tape works well, or you may solder it if you are versed in the use of a soldering iron. If the clip has a hole in the end, you can slip the end of the wire through the hole and loop it back to secure it. An even more rudimentary idea is to use the clip to attach the loose wire to the surface you are using as a ground, such as the case of the computer you are working on.


4. Place the rubber band on your wrist with the wire pressed firmly to your skin, and ground it using an unpainted portion of the casing of the computer you are working on.