Cord, Coil, Jewel, Emerald 6', 4mm
- High visibility color
- Allows supervisors to easily see that workers are wearing the wrist bands and coil cords
- Rapid retraction strength polyurethane coil cords
- Provides high memory and less coil cord dragging on work surface
- Superior resistor connection strain relief
- Superior reliability. Greatly exceeds ESD S1.1 Bending Life Test. Ongoing testing at 51,596,772 cycles vs. 16,000 requirement
- Patented* contoured spring supported banana plug
- Ensures reliable path-to ground connection expanding banana plug into socket.
- Made in USA at Chino CA facility; date coded
- Superior quality; traceable to manufacturer and lot
- Improved snap design
- Low profile keeps cord from being disconnected
- Spring loaded 4mm stainless steel constant contact snap
- Provides constant electrical contact
- Tensile strength at each end in excess of 30 lbs.
- Longer lasting cord saves money
- One Megohm Series Resistor
- To protect operator from accidental contact with equipment line voltage.
- UL listed
- Independent review of the adequacy of the product's design.
- Lifetime warranty on coil cord strain relief
- Made in the United States of America
- This item is made and stocked in Chino, CA.
Closeout items are subject to a 90-day warranty for materials and workmanship. No credit will be issued. Desco to approve exchange for similar items.
*U.S. Patent #5951337
Jewel™ Coil Cords meet and exceed the Wrist Band and Wrist Cord requirements of ANSI/ESD S20.20.
Per ESD Handbook TR20.20 paragraph 5.3.2.2.2 Wrist Strap Ground Cord, "At first glance, the ground cord appears to be a relatively simple assembly. However, the design requirements are considerable, given the wide range of user applications and the durability requirements of constant tugging, flexing, and dragging over the edge of workstation tops and equipment chassis."
Reliable Path-to-Ground: Are you wasting the money spent on ESD control? How many accidental disconnects occur a day at your plant putting your products at risk? Read the Evaluation Engineering Magazine Article, "Solving the Wristband Snap Release Problem"
*Reproduced with Permission,
EE-Evaluation Engineering, June, 2001