Grounding the frame will do nothing. Something that will work is to use a piece of cork tile, or find a piece of conveyor belt rubber for a base. Once I have completed my loading room, the entire bench top will be covered with cork tile, and also a cork tile floor.dixieppc said:I don't know what kind of foam it is, Brian. I really wouldn't know one foam from another. It's what's left over after cutting the shape of a rifle out of the inside of a gun case. But now that you have brought this up, I might have to rethink this. You remind me of something I was going to bring up earlier but forgot. Now would be a perfect time to bring it up. Would grounding the frame of a metal beam scale subdue any static problems?brians356 said:dixieppc said:I have a piece of foam sitting under the pan cradle that keeps the beam from swinging to and past zero. That way when I do a dump or set something in the pan, I then slip the foam out and the beam never swings over zero and comes back down. I'm always "settling" up toward zero, never down to zero.
The foam is an great idea as long as it doesn't introduce static electricity. What type of foam is it?
Regards,