Does anybody else get a pretty good shock when getting out of the van and closing the door. Both my wife and I receive this static shock when touching the door frame.
Any ideas?
-Erik
Any ideas?
-Erik
I have come to believe that there are individual differences with this. That is, some folks get shocked more than others. Unfortunately, for me, I am one very electric guy. I get shocked getting out of a car in the winter, in the summer, and every day in between; in the rain, the snow, sun; at day and at night; in my Odyssey, my Maxima and every other car I drive; in shorts, jeans, on cloth and leather seats (see the trend here?). Sometimes, at night, I can even see the blue spark arc from my hand to the door and it's so loud that my 3 year old asks what that noise is. My wife, on the other hand, has never ever been shocked. She finds my special Hell highly amusing: I do not. I am considering driving a grounding rod into my body and permantly attaching wire from it to the chassis unless soemone has a better idea...<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by eslayter:
Does anybody else get a pretty good shock when getting out of the van and closing the door. Both my wife and I receive this static shock when touching the door frame.</font>
Those may help keep the car from exploding, but it won't defray the electron imballance between you and the car, I don't think. I remember those though. Never did figure out what they were really supposed to accomplish. Anybody?<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by Maugham:
Remember the anti-static cables that were available in the 50's and 60's? They'd hang down from the frame to the ground and were supposed to stop static buildup. Did they actually work?
</font>
They put the chain on big trucks carrying flammable substances so that the static charge buildup wouldn't trigger a spark and an explosion inside the container. That's what I thought.<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by darelldd:
Those may help keep the car from exploding, but it won't defray the electron imballance between you and the car, I don't think. I remember those though. Never did figure out what they were really supposed to accomplish. Anybody?
</font>