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![]() I'd like to drive a ground rod near the point where the coax hooks to the ladder line from my G5RV, but it's next to a large oak tree. I can just imagine what getting through all those roots would be like. If you have a rotary-hammer drill (as opposed to a plain hammer) you can use a very long spiral drill bit to make a pilot hole through all the roots, before hammering in the ground rod. SDS masonry bits are available up to 1.0m long and will drill through almost anything, including tree roots and even solid rock. If you can drill a pilot hole, it almost guarantees that you'll be able to hammer in the first 3 feet of ground rod very easily. Beyond that depth, it depends what kind of ground you're in, and how far your luck holds out. Highland Ham wrote: Having followed this thread for some time , my simple question is : Are ground rods really necessary for a good " RF Earth " ? Are buried or elevated radials or an area covered with '(galvanised) wire mesh' not equally effective or even superior ? Wire mesh makes an excellent RF ground. It is particularly good for Field Days and DXpeditions because you can quickly roll out a large area of ground cover (typically in a '+' formation) and then roll it up again when you're done. But never for a permanent installation! While clearing the ground at this new QTH, I ran into an impossible tangle of matted grass and bits of sharp, rusty mesh that turned out to be an abandoned chicken coop. We finally had to plane off the whole area with a dozer blade, and that still didn't get rid of it, of course - all we could do was push the problem out of the way. Having experienced the legacy left by abandoned chicken mesh, I have vowed always to use conventional wire radials that can be pulled out easily after I'm gone. -- 73 from Ian GM3SEK |
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