I'm not electrically savvy, but as I understand it smokeless powder is coated in graphite both to aid in it sliding about and to add electrical conductivity grain-to-grain in the interest of "eliminating electrical potential" which is a fancy way to say "eliminate or equalize static charge." This static or "unequal potential" plays havoc in more ways than just fire hazard....and growing up in Minn'Desoda where static charges grow to horrendous potentials I STILL sometimes will absently touch the pump and tap my knuckle to the rig before touching down with the nozzle. Talk to a small plane pilot to see where they will sometimes clamp a ground to the plane before fueling....
That light wire thing is real IME. I first had a static problem yrs ago in a powder measure where the granules would pop about and cling to the barrel. I was of course trying all sorts of things to increase consistency of my thrown charges and was convinced that if the powder was clinging to the barrel and to itself it followed that it didn't flow freely. right or wrong

I took a tiny piece of wire and screwed it to the center screw on the electrical outlet, touched it to the powder chamber and watched the granules FALL off the walls...... To this day all of my hand throwers are grounded. Folks look at the wire lead on my Harrell thrower and ask "what th'.. is this thing powered or what?"
You see where I'm going with this...... While the AL pan may well act to shield against "stray RF" or whatever, it might also be hoovis to run a liddle wire from it to make a grounding bleeder if you again develop a wandering zero.
Since dryer sheets are kindofa' workaround for this problem, I found this wiki interesting. I don't know if the aluminum ball acts as a capacitor? Or if it even works... but it must have worked for somebody
https://lifehacker.com/5533418/use-aluminum-foil-to-keep-clothes-static-free