I read in !emc-pstc that Arno van Kesteren avkes...@eso.org wrote (in
001801c1cec6$a16ff500$55b9a...@hq.eso.org) about 'Earthing of
conductive floor tiles', on Mon, 18 Mar 2002:
Do conductive tiles in floors for ESD prevention have to be connected
together (e.g. through a low impedance earth
'emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org '
emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
03/20/2002 cc: (bcc: Robert E.
Heller/US-Corporate/3M/US)
10:31 AM Subject: RE: Earthing of
conductive floor tiles
Several years ago I was called in to debug a chamber that had spurious emissions
whilst turning the table. Naturally, everyone accused the tt manufacturer but
after
several hours of frustrating dead ends, it turned out that the small amount of
vibration caused by the tt was causing the floor
They can be. It depends upon what your
requirements for conductivity with the floor are.
You can also use plain old bare concrete floors
without any coverage. They have been known to
be sufficient for some conductive requirements.
Concrete flooring can be sufficient for such things
as
Hi Arno,
John gave you the short answer...the MFG should have installation
instructions. In all of the installation I have been party, there is a grid
of copper tape laid down in the conductive adhesive. This keeps the
adhesive from getting excessively resistive over large areas. Surface
I read in !emc-pstc that Arno van Kesteren avkes...@eso.org wrote (in
001801c1cec6$a16ff500$55b9a...@hq.eso.org) about 'Earthing of
conductive floor tiles', on Mon, 18 Mar 2002:
Do conductive tiles in floors for ESD prevention have to be connected
together (e.g. through a low impedance earth
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