Kenny We only put DI water on the sponges, from a spray bottle. One of the soldering iron manufacturer's sites, perhaps Metcal's site, claims that using DI water on the sponge will make your tips last longer. Not having that much free time I haven't tried to prove or disprove that, but using DI can't hurt, and it means 1 less source of possible contamination. We use a spray bottle because our environmental auditor was concerned that running the sponge under a tap may wash bits of lead (solder) into the drain. Maybe we could let the operators drink DI water??? Seriously, our fix is to have fountains in the area. regards, Graham Collins Process Engineer, Litton Systems Canada, Atlantic Facility (902) 873-2000 ext 6215 -----Original Message----- From: Kenny Bloomquist [mailto:[log in to unmask]] Sent: Friday, February 25, 2000 1:12 PM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: [TN] Drinking Water Hi Brian, Thanks for the reply. You say that there may be a problem with spills but it's only water, nothing else is allowed. You put water on your sponges and in a lot of companies people keep a small bottle of water on their bench to refresh this sponge. KennyB At 06:56 PM 2/25/00 +0200, Brian Ellis wrote: >Ken > >I guess the problem is with spills. IMHO, it would be better to have a drinking >fountain in the workshop, a couple of metres from any workbench. > >If you wish to be rigid, how do you stop the operators from yawning, coughing or >sneezing, all of which can spray body liquors in an aerosol over several metres, even >if they manage to put a hand in front of the face or even with a paper/cotton mask? > >Brian > >Kenny Bloomquist wrote: > >> As long as Steve has brought up the touchy subject of safety glasses I >> thought I'd throw in the touchy question of drinking water on the line. >> >> We work to J-STD-001 and flow that down to our subcontractors. We have a >> subcontractor that has always allowed their operators to have a jug of >> water at their bench. The containers they use are ESD safe and have a straw >> out the top so they don't have to touch the top of the container where they >> drink (unlike a sports bottle with a pop up top) . >> >> Two questions, what is the problem with this approach and when the spec >> refers to "drinking" does it mean water and why? (woops I guess that's >> three questions) >> ############################################################## TechNet Mail List provided as a free service by IPC using LISTSERV 1.8c ############################################################## To subscribe/unsubscribe, send a message to [log in to unmask] with following text in the body: To subscribe: SUBSCRIBE TECHNET <your full name> To unsubscribe: SIGNOFF TECHNET ############################################################## Please visit IPC web site (http://www.ipc.org/html/forum.htm) for additional information. If you need assistance - contact Keach Sasamori at [log in to unmask] or 847-509-9700 ext.5315 ############################################################## ############################################################## TechNet Mail List provided as a free service by IPC using LISTSERV 1.8c ############################################################## To subscribe/unsubscribe, send a message to [log in to unmask] with following text in the body: To subscribe: SUBSCRIBE TECHNET <your full name> To unsubscribe: SIGNOFF TECHNET ############################################################## Please visit IPC web site (http://www.ipc.org/html/forum.htm) for additional information. If you need assistance - contact Keach Sasamori at [log in to unmask] or 847-509-9700 ext.5315 ##############################################################