USB drive in a ziploc bag?

Guest
What are the chances of a USB drive being damaged by static
electricity if someone put it in a ziploc drive?
 
On Fri, 13 Jun 2008 07:27:28 -0700 (PDT),
curious.no.spam.com@gmail.com wrote:

What are the chances of a USB drive being damaged by static
electricity if someone put it in a ziploc drive?
Zero. These things are designed to be handled.

John
 
On Jun 14, 3:23 pm, "ian field" <dai....@ntlworld.com> wrote:
curious.no.spam....@gmail.com> wrote in message

news:dc4e20e5-9560-4a9e-b91e-e4ce8473e4cb@l64g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

What are the chances of a USB drive being damaged by static
electricity if someone put it in a ziploc drive?

The protective cap frequently comes off the USB stick I carry around in my
pocket - its been rattling around in there with all sorts of junk for a
couple of years now.
I put a USB stick on my keyring and then dropped my keys on the
concrete. The USB stick never worked again.

-Bill
 
ian field wrote:

"Bill Bowden" <wrongaddress@att.net> wrote in message

news:1f0800d9-2cf9-4dcb-9b20-aab6c11bb5e1@34g2000hsh.googlegroups.com...
On Jun 14, 3:23 pm, "ian field" <dai....@ntlworld.com> wrote:
curious.no.spam....@gmail.com> wrote in message


news:dc4e20e5-9560-4a9e-b91e-e4ce8473e4cb@l64g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

What are the chances of a USB drive being damaged by static
electricity if someone put it in a ziploc drive?

The protective cap frequently comes off the USB stick I carry around
in my pocket - its been rattling around in there with all sorts of
junk for a couple of years now.

I put a USB stick on my keyring and then dropped my keys on the
concrete. The USB stick never worked again.

-Bill

That must have been unusual bad luck, I recently needed a USB
connector and sacrificed an old 64M stick to get it - it was
surprisingly solidly assembled and correspondingly difficult to remove
the connector intact.
Its usually the oscillator xtal that gets shattered ! Not that you can
see the damage inside the casing. Getting it off the board is easier
than finding a new xtal !

--
Best Regards:
Baron.
 
On Jun 15, 12:39 pm, Baron <baron.nos...@linuxmaniac.nospam.net>
wrote:

I put a USB stick on my keyring and then dropped my keys on the
concrete. The USB stick never worked again.

Its usually the oscillator xtal that gets shattered ! Not that you can
see the damage inside the casing. Getting it off the board is easier
than finding a new xtal !
I was not impressed by the solder quality on the failed one I took
apart.

It started enumerating with a generic chip-vendor ID rather than the
stick vendor,
I figure that either the flash chip failed, or the connection between
that and the USB chip failed.

But yes, a broken crystal is another possibility for a more generally
"dead" failure.
 

Welcome to EDABoard.com

Sponsor

Back
Top