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General => General Technical Chat => Topic started by: Mikey on November 27, 2012, 05:35:27 pm

Title: This made me laugh...
Post by: Mikey on November 27, 2012, 05:35:27 pm
I received this today, and it made me laugh before opening the bag... :-DD

Do you have any examples of something like that?
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: T4P on November 27, 2012, 05:46:04 pm
IC sockets in ESD bags ... beat that  ::)
Throw in the mix you have blank PCBs in ESD bags as well as well as having seen Heatsinks in ESD bags  :-+
Kudos to china for placing stuff into ESD bags but they overdid it  :-//
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: Colfaxmingo on November 27, 2012, 06:13:53 pm
What no humidity indicator?
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: G7PSK on November 27, 2012, 06:16:18 pm
I have had shrink sleve delivered like that. I think that it is just that the packaging is all the same.
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: Lukas on November 27, 2012, 06:17:04 pm
Anyone got an idea what to do with all these ESD and desiccant bags from Digikey, etc.?
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: firewalker on November 27, 2012, 06:18:31 pm
Recycle.

Alexander.
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: SeanB on November 27, 2012, 07:37:35 pm
I used to use desiccant that was supplied in a 44 gallon drum. We would go through about 1 every 4 months.

At least we did not get the desiccant delivered in a wrapped drum with a desiccant bag in the overwrap.

Best was ordering a single washer one day. Came coated with preservative paint, wrapped in a greased paper sheet. That then was sealed with a 1kg bag of desiccant into a plastic pouch, which was then sealed again with another 1kg bag of desiccant in a overwrap of metallised mylar cloth, which was in turn wrapped in another pouch. Each bag had a label on it, including on the greased paper.  The washer had a label tied on it as well with full details. This was an ordinary M6 washer with a plain chromate coat..........
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: steve30 on November 28, 2012, 05:07:30 am
I had a load of IC sockets and similar stuff come from Farnell in static shielding bags. Looks pointless, but its probably easier and/or cheaper for them to stick to just one kind of packaging.

I did get a tube of seven segment displays from Farnell, but one display was missing. Then there was a separate small padded cardboard anti static box. It contained the one remaining display.

Edit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/36651585@N04/8225347247/#in/photostream (http://www.flickr.com/photos/36651585@N04/8225347247/#in/photostream)
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: bitwelder on November 28, 2012, 08:19:57 am
What no humidity indicator?
And no tilt indicator either! *shocked*
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: Leo Bodnar on November 28, 2012, 08:00:32 pm
I did get a tube of seven segment displays from Farnell, but one display was missing. Then there was a separate small padded cardboard anti static box. It contained the one remaining display.

Edit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/36651585@N04/8225347247/#in/photostream (http://www.flickr.com/photos/36651585@N04/8225347247/#in/photostream)

What's wrong with that?  LEDs are susceptible to easy reverse voltage breakdown.   Some can only sustain few volts.
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: Leo Bodnar on November 28, 2012, 08:02:30 pm
IC sockets in ESD bags ... beat that  ::)

RS UK often places orders in bags that have big red label to the effect of "THIS BAG CONTAINS THE PARTS YOU HAVE ORDERED."

Leo
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: MartinX on November 28, 2012, 11:21:00 pm
One reason for doing this is that some companies does not want any non ESD safe packaging materials in the work area, you don“t put SMD connectors in a non ESD safe reel, no one wants to load that in to their machine, of course the connectors themselves does not need it but you are trying to keep the whole place free from potential ESD sources.
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: tom66 on November 28, 2012, 11:32:41 pm
I have had through hole axial 3W resistors in ESD safe bags.
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: Achilles on November 29, 2012, 05:40:31 pm
well,
I got my SIBA fuses (440mA and 11A) in an ESD bag.....I don't expect them to be that sensitive.....;)
My Hantek DSO(1202B) came in an ESD Bag as well (no, it wasn't a DIY kit....)
I didn't get headers in a ESD bag yet.....but I still have a long life ahead I guess :D


Probably it's just cheaper to ship everything in an ESD bag instead of separating ESD/Non ESD in the logistics center. I do have my standard supplier and he is shipping in ESD/Non ESD bags, but everything separated in small plastic bags. So in the end you'll end up with a lot of empty plastic bags anyway.

So in general I would prefer overprotection for sensitive or expensive parts.


Maybe we should share funny/strange shipping packages here....
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: SeanB on November 29, 2012, 05:58:36 pm
That would be HP/Agilent spares then...............
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: nanofrog on November 29, 2012, 11:13:11 pm
I got my SIBA fuses (440mA and 11A) in an ESD bag.....
Same.

That would be HP/Agilent spares then...............
In my case, definitely.  ;D
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: SeanB on November 30, 2012, 04:44:32 am
There was a whole series on TheRegister about excessive packaging. A whole wooden pallet for a single 1 page key.....
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: DavidJRobertson on December 02, 2012, 05:14:37 pm
Recently I ordered a single part from farnell - a 32 pin TQFP microcontroller. It came in a huge padded envelope, containing huge a moisture control/ESD bag containing the single part sandwiched between two trays that can hold 250 parts, along with desiccant and one of humidity indicator cards.
A little overkill, I think.
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: Monkeh on December 02, 2012, 05:28:44 pm
If you keep non-ESD bags in the warehouse, the poorly-trained bored warehouse employees will just use them when they run out of ESD bags instead of going to fetch more. This results in angry customers and lost revenue.
Title: Re: This made me laugh...
Post by: Achilles on December 02, 2012, 09:35:15 pm
I got my SIBA fuses (440mA and 11A) in an ESD bag.....
Same.

That would be HP/Agilent spares then...............
In my case, definitely.  ;D

jupp....Agilent as well...... ;)