Shelf trolley WE-01-03-ESD
Description
Shelf trolley WE-01-03-ESD
A specialist solution for moving materials and components sensitive to electrostatic charges (e.g. integrated circuits). The shelves are made of conductive melamine board and the frame is made of steel profiles painted with conductive paint. Two pairs of swivel wheels with brakes ensure excellent mobility of the entire structure. The total load capacity is up to 200 kg with even distribution. As dedicated equipment, WE-01-03-ESD can be found in EPA zones in industrial plants and warehouses.
Characteristics of the WE-01-03-ESD trolley
- construction made of steel profiles, powder coated with conductive paint in RAL 7035 color
- overall dimensions of the trolley: 1128 x 540 x 863 mm (length with handle x width x height)
- tops made of conductive melamine-coated board 25 mm thick
- top with dimensions 1000x500 mm (1004x504 mm with ABS veneer)
- middle and bottom counters with dimensions 925x500 mm (929x504 mm with ABS veneer)
- surface height of individual tops: top - 863 mm, middle - 551 mm, bottom - 243 mm
- clearance between the top of the middle and the supports of the top - 260 mm, between the surface of the bottom and the supports of the middle - 248 mm
- total load capacity: 200 kg when evenly distributed
- four antistatic wheels 125 mm, swivel with brakes
- optional: grounding assembly with two 10 mm snaps and one 4 mm banana socket, 1.8 m grounding cable included
ESD equipment from the manufacturer Jabama
The trolleys manufactured by Jabama are a specialist equipment that will be just as well suited for large EPA zones in industrial halls as they are to smaller electronics plants. Made of solid, specially painted steel profiles and damage-resistant, conductive melamine board, combined with antistatic wheels and an optional grounding unit, the equipment manufactured and offered by Jabama stands out in terms of quality and ergonomics on the market. Check also our offer for ESD workstations, control cabinet prefabrication racks and wire trolleys.
