How do you get a ground rod to 6 feet ?
"Fred McKenzie" wrote in message
...
In article , Dave Lemper
wrote:
The soil in central Texas is called Caliche with a lot of clay,
CaCO3 & shale. Attempting to drive in a ground rod
yielded only a mushroom on top & blisters on me.
Local tool rental place has concrete bits, but maximum
length of 18 inches. Possibly longer bits are available in
a larger city.
Dave-
Last year there was a discussion here about sinking a ground rod using
an "SDS Plus" Hammer Drill set to hammer-only. I think it was Ian
White, GM3SEK, who proposed that method. There is also an article at
http://www.n4lcd.com/groundrod/ that proposes a slightly different
method of coupling the hammer drill to the ground rod.
The question is whether Caliche can be penetrated by such a method. Has
anyone tried it?
Another consideration is whether or not there is moisture in the soil
below the Caliche. If not, then it might not provide a low-impedance
ground even if you could penetrate it!
Fred
K4DII
-
If you don't have all the tools described above for an elegant way to drive
a ground rod, it isn't that bad by hand. The secret is to dig through the
soft dirt to expose the caliche. I used a crowbar hammered with a small
sledge. It isn't too bad for just a ground rod, and might be quicker than
looking for/borrowing more tools.
I planted a 60 foot self supporting tower in a hole 3 ft by 3ft and 6 feet
deep. I would have preferred an elegant solution for that!
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