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On May 6, 11:36*am, Jim Lux wrote:
What if you use a coax with two shields, one shield for chassis ground which is the coax connection and the outer shield for earth/ground? Yes, there could be a ground loop but the nearest ground to a strike/ antenna is probably the best protection You'll still need to deal with RF currents flowing on the outside of the coax (and also potentially between inner and outer shields). A good transient suppression scheme at the entry point deals with the overvoltages from lightning, power lines falling on your antenna, etc. The challenge is in protecting a sensitive receiver front end, while not introducing other problems: *if the receiver burns out at 1Volt, a clamp at 300V isn't going to save the front end, although it will keep the radio from catching on fire. *A diode clamp to the supply rails or similar will save the front end, but will almost certainly result in IMD issues with strong input signals. *Sometimes, the front end just has to be the sacrificial "fuse", so you want to make sure that it's a cheap & replaceable part that suffers. Let me try again and put it another way. What if: The transmission line is a two parallel wire system.This is enclosed in one sided metalized mylar isolated shielding Total covered with insulation and wire netting for true ground ? All of the above buried in ground |
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