Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I've read a lot about radials: elevated vs. gull-wings vs. underground,
how many (120/64/31/16/4/2/0), etc. After reading the following, maybe someone will tell me if I did right or wrong. This is long, but the nitty-gritty details might be necessary for a good answer. I recently erected a 20-meter vertical in my front yard with 16 equally- spaced, about-20-foot-long, UNinsulated radials (electric-fence wire) around its base starting at a metal plate and just laid on grass about 3 inches above the soil and "pinned" (with about 8-inch-long stiff-wire loops) to the soil at the ends to keep them taut/straight. The metal plate was "grounded" with a 2-feet-long metal rod driven into the soil. The antenna worked acceptably well, so I decided to make it more permanent (and the radials less-likely to be tripped over!-) by mowing the grass REALLY short and resituating the radials such that they are now only about an inch above the soil (and will soon be hidden below 2 inches of grass). I also "pinned" the radials a little more tightly to the soil once or twice along their lengths. While doing that, I realized that if I lengthened two of the radials by about 10 feet, I could connect them to 8-foot ground rods (at the bases of a tower and a flagpole) that were themselves connected (with thick, multi-strand, insulated copper wires that run from the tops of the ground rods horizontally about 10 feet and then 9 feet down) to a 75-foot-long Ufer ground that goes around about half of the foundation of my basement. My worry revolves around the fact that, while my radials are NOT *IN* the soil, they are pretty-well connected TO the soil, and two of them are connected to the best ground I could buy when my house was being built. Have I done wrong by grounding them, or should I have used INSULATED radials and NOT "pinned" them to the soil and NOT connected them to my Ufer ground? --W0PBV. -- --Myron A. Calhoun. Five boxes preserve our freedoms: soap, ballot, witness, jury, and cartridge NRA Life Member & Certified Instructor for Rifle, Pistol, & Home Firearm Safety Also Certified Instructor for the Kansas Concealed-Carry Handgun (CCH) license |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Myron A. Calhoun" wrote in message ... I've read a lot about radials: elevated vs. gull-wings vs. underground, how many (120/64/31/16/4/2/0), etc. After reading the following, maybe someone will tell me if I did right or wrong. This is long, but the nitty-gritty details might be necessary for a good answer. I recently erected a 20-meter vertical in my front yard with 16 equally- spaced, about-20-foot-long, UNinsulated radials (electric-fence wire) around its base starting at a metal plate and just laid on grass about 3 inches above the soil and "pinned" (with about 8-inch-long stiff-wire loops) to the soil at the ends to keep them taut/straight. The metal plate was "grounded" with a 2-feet-long metal rod driven into the soil. The antenna worked acceptably well, so I decided to make it more permanent (and the radials less-likely to be tripped over!-) by mowing the grass REALLY short and resituating the radials such that they are now only about an inch above the soil (and will soon be hidden below 2 inches of grass). I also "pinned" the radials a little more tightly to the soil once or twice along their lengths. While doing that, I realized that if I lengthened two of the radials by about 10 feet, I could connect them to 8-foot ground rods (at the bases of a tower and a flagpole) that were themselves connected (with thick, multi-strand, insulated copper wires that run from the tops of the ground rods horizontally about 10 feet and then 9 feet down) to a 75-foot-long Ufer ground that goes around about half of the foundation of my basement. My worry revolves around the fact that, while my radials are NOT *IN* the soil, they are pretty-well connected TO the soil, and two of them are connected to the best ground I could buy when my house was being built. Have I done wrong by grounding them, or should I have used INSULATED radials and NOT "pinned" them to the soil and NOT connected them to my Ufer ground? --W0PBV. -- --Myron A. Calhoun. Five boxes preserve our freedoms: soap, ballot, witness, jury, and cartridge NRA Life Member & Certified Instructor for Rifle, Pistol, & Home Firearm Safety Also Certified Instructor for the Kansas Concealed-Carry Handgun (CCH) license it sounds like you have done right. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
(OT) sorry, my mistake. | Shortwave | |||
It was a mistake for the ITU to eliminate the CW requirement. | Policy | |||
It was a mistake for the ITU to eliminate the CW requirement. | Scanner | |||
It was a mistake for the ITU to eliminate the CW requirement. | General | |||
Don't make the BIG mistake selling or buying radio gear ... | Swap |