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On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 02:37:18 -0400, Roger
wrote: On Tue, 13 Jul 2010 10:52:14 -0400, John Ferrell wrote: I don't remember the sources but I have concluded that the Grounding wire should be no smaller than #6. #6 is a minimum required by code here in the Midland MI area. As it's a minimum, I would not use anything less than #2 Copper. More than 8 feet of ground rod is of little consequence. That depends on your soil conditions. Here I'd probably agree as the soil is usually quite moist and just a couple feet down is just plain wet. However a string of ground rods tied together can be quite effective. All ground rods should be tied together. Don't put your house between two electrodes! I'd put a circle of them around the house, all tied together every 16', but due to the garage and driveway, that is not possible. The ground rods are better directly under the structure that they are protecting. I have a 100' 45G 10' from the NW corner of the garage. Tied into it is a grounding system consisting of 32 or 33 8' ground rods connected together with over 600 feet of bare #2. This system consists of a ground rod about a foot outside the concrete bare in like with each tower leg. The cable is clamped to each tower leg and comes off in a curve to the ground rod and is extended out in a straight line at least 80' with additional ground rods every 16' (give or take a tad) This system also ties into the house electrical ground. There is an additional run that goes directly from the ground rod at the base of the 45G to the 25G on the West end of the shop. From there it goes on around the shop to the mast holding the 144/440 vertical and around the south side to enter the shop to provide grounding for the station and computers. This also ties the shop ground (which is on a different electrical feed) to the house ground. The system does not absorb massive high energy strikes. It starts bleeding off the energy before the strike builds and thus minmiizes the effect. Mine has taken at least 17 direct hits that have been visually verified. All that energy had to go some where. The bleeding off theory has been pretty well discussed and discarded on the tower talk reflector. Read up on the Polyphaser site. They have some good information. Those lightning balls or porcupines have proven ineffective. The major work for lightning rods and ground systems is to divert the lightning away from the interior of buildings and process control systems in Industry. Home improvement stores sell #6 wire, ground rods and connectors. Read the new NEC code for tower and antenna grounding. There is a reason I went with #2. On Mon, 12 Jul 2010 21:21:24 -0700 (PDT), Tom Horne wrote: Can anyone make a recommendation, based on actual training and experience, as to what width and thickness of copper strap would be needed as the down conductor from the antenna mounts at the peak of my house roof, some twenty five feet above local terrain. I agree with the #2 recommendation. OTOH there is nothing that will protect an installation from the big atypical Positive lightning, or super strikes. That's the stuff that blows holes in airplanes. I have a a mount for an antenna at one gable end and a mount for a weather station sensor array at the other. What thickness and width should I use in the earth between the two Grounding Electrode Systems. I will drive five eighths inch copper rods, each eight feet long as far out from the foundation as I can get them or eight feet were possible. On one end that will be only six feet due to the proximity of the property line. At all of the other rod locations I will be able to keep them at least eight feet from any underground obstructions. To compensate for the proximity to the foundation wall to the first rod I will use rod couplers and drive it to hard rock or sixteen feet whichever comes first. I'm guessing that in keeping the remaining rods at least eight feet out from the foundation and sixteen feet apart that I will only have four rods total in a ring around the back side of the house. What is the best way to attach the copper strap to the support masts and eve brackets themselves? Do you know of anything that will make a good connection to the one inch galvanized iron pipes that I'm using for support masts? Can you recommend a technique for bonding the interior grounding buss at the operating position to the exterior vertical copper strap. I have no idea how that is usually done. The Polyphaser site has a tutorial on grounding tower legs and coax shields. this would be applicable to connecting to the 1" pipe. Use lots on NoAlox between the strap and pipe. 73 Roger (K8RI) John Ferrell W8CCW Roger, I like your response better than mine. It sounds to me like you have the ultimate solution. I arrived at my operating point one step at a time and I quit working on the problem when I quit having problems! I have a non-Ham friend that lives a couple of miles down the ridge from me that continues to have lightning related problems that may benefit from your advice. I will pass along the Wisdom. Thank you! John Ferrell W8CCW |
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