If I can inject a teeny bit of science in here?
The static comes from the wood chips scraping along the inside of the plastic pipe. Exactly the same effect as stroking a balloon across a woollen jumper and then sticking the balloon to a wall.
NONE of the pipes create static by themselves. The greater the flow speed, the more static produced.
Now, how are the pipes connected to the wall? if they are fixed with pipe clips, and you have left the rubber bumper pads on the clips, then the pipe is insulated.
If you have metal clips touching the pipe and then fixed to the wall in such a way that the metal clip stud is NOT insulated by a plastic wall plug you have earthed the pipe.
If the pipe goes into a metal container with a motor attached, its earthed through the mains lead.
So, most systems are earthed somewhere and will never produce shocks.
But if you have a powerful extraction system, into plastic hoses and plastic pipes and plastic cyclones, and the securing clips arent physically touching brick walls, guess what? you have static!
easy peasy innit?
On large installations I have heard of bare copper wire being threaded through the entire run and earthed through the pipe at each end.
The static comes from the wood chips scraping along the inside of the plastic pipe. Exactly the same effect as stroking a balloon across a woollen jumper and then sticking the balloon to a wall.
NONE of the pipes create static by themselves. The greater the flow speed, the more static produced.
Now, how are the pipes connected to the wall? if they are fixed with pipe clips, and you have left the rubber bumper pads on the clips, then the pipe is insulated.
If you have metal clips touching the pipe and then fixed to the wall in such a way that the metal clip stud is NOT insulated by a plastic wall plug you have earthed the pipe.
If the pipe goes into a metal container with a motor attached, its earthed through the mains lead.
So, most systems are earthed somewhere and will never produce shocks.
But if you have a powerful extraction system, into plastic hoses and plastic pipes and plastic cyclones, and the securing clips arent physically touching brick walls, guess what? you have static!
easy peasy innit?
On large installations I have heard of bare copper wire being threaded through the entire run and earthed through the pipe at each end.