Equipment guidelines
Grounding equipment must include either a wrist strap or a foot strap at a grounded workstation.
●
When seated, wear a wrist strap connected to a grounded system. Wrist straps are flexible straps
with a minimum of one megohm ±10% resistance in the ground cords. To provide proper ground,
wear a strap snugly against the skin at all times. On grounded mats with banana-plug connectors,
use alligator clips to connect a wrist strap.
●
When standing, use foot straps and a grounded floor mat. Foot straps (heel, toe, or boot straps)
can be used at standing workstations and are compatible with most types of shoes or boots. On
conductive floors or dissipative floor mats, use foot straps on both feet with a minimum of one
megohm resistance between the operator and ground. To be effective, the conductive must be
worn in contact with the skin.
The following grounding equipment is recommended to prevent electrostatic damage:
●
Antistatic tape
●
Antistatic smocks, aprons, and sleeve protectors
●
Conductive bins and other assembly or soldering aids
●
Nonconductive foam
●
Conductive tabletop workstations with ground cords of one megohm resistance
●
Static-dissipative tables or floor mats with hard ties to the ground
●
Field service kits
●
Static awareness labels
●
Material-handling packages
●
Nonconductive plastic bags, tubes, or boxes
●
Metal tote boxes
●
Electrostatic voltage levels and protective materials
The following table lists the shielding protection provided by antistatic bags and floor mats.
Material
Use
Voltage protection level
Antistatic plastics
Bags
1,500 V
Carbon-loaded plastic
Floor mats
7,500 V
Metallized laminate
Floor mats
5,000 V
ENWW
Preliminary replacement requirements
47
Summary of Contents for ENVY m6-1100
Page 4: ...iv Safety warning notice ENWW ...
Page 8: ...viii ENWW ...
Page 18: ...10 Chapter 1 Product description ENWW ...
Page 30: ...22 Chapter 2 External component identification ENWW ...
Page 31: ...3 Illustrated parts catalog ENWW 23 ...
Page 33: ...Computer major components ENWW Computer major components 25 ...
Page 50: ...42 Chapter 3 Illustrated parts catalog ENWW ...
Page 108: ...100 Chapter 4 Removal and replacement procedures ENWW ...
Page 112: ...104 Chapter 5 Using Setup Utility BIOS and System Diagnostics ENWW ...
Page 116: ...108 Chapter 6 Specifications ENWW ...
Page 124: ...116 Chapter 7 Backing up restoring and recovering ENWW ...
Page 128: ...120 Chapter 9 Recycling ENWW ...
Page 132: ...124 Index ENWW ...
Page 133: ......
Page 134: ......