An assembly is a combination of clamps and static grounding wires that will provide a connection to drain static electricity from a piece of equipment to your known grounding point. We provide three different styles of static bonding and grounding assemblies, depending on your application.
If you are uncomfortable designing a static grounding system by yourself, we can assist with a "site survey" assessment to help you determine the best way to provide bonding and grounding in your workplace.
Eliminate tangled bonding and grounding assemblies that lie on the floor and present a tripping hazard. Coiled assemblies neatly and compactly retract out of the way when not in use. The coiled plated steel cable is bright arrange PVC coated for high visibly.
Using fixed lengths of straight static bonding and grounding wire at least one heavy-duty hand clamp, these are perfect for those applications where you want to have a more economical option and you know the exact length of play you want between the equipment and your known grounding point.
These also have fixed lengths of the same durable static grounding cable, but the ends are less heavy-duty clamps, such as alligator clips. We would only recommend these options when you have a perfectly clean surface on the equipment you are draining static from. While these are a very economical solution, the alligator clips are not designed to cut through rust, paint, or other surface dirt to make a good metal-to-metal contact.
If you don't see what you need here, no problem! We can change any of the assemblies to include the length or clamp type that you require. Chances are we have already made it in the past, and if not, we are happy to discuss and create the custom solution that fits your application. Please contact one of our sales representatives for assistance with custom designs.
Here are some of our latest education pieces that can help you choose the right static bonding and grounding assembly for your application:
Static Bonding and Grounding is a mandatory thing in hazardous locations, but none of the regulations tell you HOW to do it. We'll start you on the right path with a primer on static bonding and grounding.
Learn which static grounding clamp is best for which applications.
So what IS "static bonding and grounding?" What's the 'bonding' part versus the 'grounding' part?