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Dave wrote:
but rf doesn't flow 'into the earth'. rf current is always trying to complete the circuit back to it's source... i.e. 'ground radials' under a vertical are collecting the current and returning it to the feedpoint, so they are actually 'sucking' rf out of the ground. the 'ground' connection to a radio feeding a dipole is actually returning current from the ground back to the feedpoint via the outside of the coax shield... that is why you can get high voltages at the radio end of the cable, if too much current is coupled from the antenna onto other conductors connected to 'ground' they will feed current back through the radio 'ground' and out the shield of the feedline to get to the feedpoint, and if you happen to be too close to the antenna or some other object that couples the rf to you then you get burned when the rf from you flows back to the radio when you touch something that is 'grounded'. "Bill Turner" wrote in message ... An RF ground is where RF energy flows into the earth. A lot of folks misuse the word "ground" when they really mean a common connection point, which may or may not have anything to do with earth. Be careful to define just what you mean. Bill, W6WRT ------------ ORIGINAL MESSAGE ------------ On Sat, 11 Nov 2006 12:06:16 -0000, "David" nospam@nospam wrote: What would you define RF ground as? There seem to be a lot of different ideas. Correct. If pink fairies dance the head of the pin, all bets are off. Although everything applies if dancing blue fairies... JS |
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