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Gerry Moersdorf October 24th 04 11:07 PM

Grounding Question
 
I am installing a G5RV antenna, and a new ground for my TS-2000. The radio
is in the center of the house, and instead of running a long ground wire to
a ground rod at the outside of the house, i was thinking of drilling a hole
directly below the radio room in the basement floor and driving the ground
rod there. That would make the ground wire only 6-8' long. Assuming i do
not find a wastepipe while driving my ground, is there any issues with
getting a HF ground this way?

Also, I was going to install lightning arrestors at the radio and ground
them to the new ground rod, is it better to place the lightning arrestors
and an additional ground rod where the coax enters the house, or will this
cause ground loop issues?

Thanks in advance to the collective wisdom of group.

Gerry KC8ZUL



Jack Painter October 24th 04 11:17 PM


"Gerry Moersdorf" wrote in message
...
I am installing a G5RV antenna, and a new ground for my TS-2000. The

radio
is in the center of the house, and instead of running a long ground wire

to
a ground rod at the outside of the house, i was thinking of drilling a

hole
directly below the radio room in the basement floor and driving the ground
rod there. That would make the ground wire only 6-8' long. Assuming i do
not find a wastepipe while driving my ground, is there any issues with
getting a HF ground this way?

Also, I was going to install lightning arrestors at the radio and ground
them to the new ground rod, is it better to place the lightning arrestors
and an additional ground rod where the coax enters the house, or will this
cause ground loop issues?

Thanks in advance to the collective wisdom of group.

Gerry KC8ZUL





JGBOYLES October 24th 04 11:35 PM

I was going to install lightning arrestors at the radio and ground
them to the new ground rod, is it better to place the lightning arrestors
and an additional ground rod where the coax enters the house, or will this
cause ground loop issues?


Hi Gerry, You are dealing with two different grounding issues, and I can't
comment on the ground loop one. The purpose of the lightning protection ground
is to make sure that most of the current from a strike gets to ground the way
you want. And you want it NOT to go thru your TS on its way to ground.
A ground directly at the rig can be a safety ground as well as an RF ground.
What you describe sounds like you are trying for an RF ground at the rig and a
safety ground at the entrance to the house. You may not need an RF ground, I
would concentrate on the safety aspect, and add the RF later if needed.

73 Gary N4AST

Jack Painter October 25th 04 12:05 AM

"Gerry Moersdorf" wrote
I am installing a G5RV antenna, and a new ground for my TS-2000. The

radio
is in the center of the house, and instead of running a long ground wire

to
a ground rod at the outside of the house, i was thinking of drilling a

hole
directly below the radio room in the basement floor and driving the ground
rod there. That would make the ground wire only 6-8' long. Assuming i do
not find a wastepipe while driving my ground, is there any issues with
getting a HF ground this way?


Gerry, if the G5RV is a non-radial using antenna (function is complete, as
in a dipole), then this so called RF ground from your transmitter will be of
little if any use. If you ran ladder line to it directly from the
transmitter or tuner (and you were willing to tolerate RF in your shack and
your home) maybe you do need an RF ground! G Assuming that's not the case,
and you just want an RF ground anyway, the shortest path via minimum 3" wide
copper strap would provide a good one, regardless of its basement location

Also, I was going to install lightning arrestors at the radio and ground
them to the new ground rod, is it better to place the lightning arrestors
and an additional ground rod where the coax enters the house, or will this
cause ground loop issues?

Thanks in advance to the collective wisdom of group.

Gerry KC8ZUL


Here is where you are mixing apples and oranges, because ground loops and
lightning protection are not related. The only time lightning arrestors
should ever be inside the shack is when they are immediately attached to the
station single point ground *when that is inside the shack*. Mine is for
instance, but I am also alongside an outside wall under which is the
entry-point for all coax, and the shield-grounding point for same. If you
are transmitting from an interior room, far from the coax entry point to the
home, then the coax shields should be grounded outside the home and
lightning arrestors installed there. The key is to have the lightning
arrestors on as short a connection to real earth ground as possible.
Preferably within 1' but in no cases more than 4' (via extremely low
impedance and high current capability connectors) from earth ground.

Your location indicates that an outside bulkhead (some call this a "ground
window") might be ideal. This would typically involve a copper plate
attached to the external coax entry point of the home. Bond this bulkhead
immediately to a minimum 5/8" x 8' ground rod (and bury the ground rod top,
do not let it protrude above ground). Ground all coaxial cable shielding to
the ground rod (or *heavy* strap leading to it) and attach the lightning
arrestors directly to the copper bulkhead above that. Then add a second and
third ground rod, each fanning out from the first and a minimum of 12' from
the first (16' is recommended).

If you are able to, install a very heavy (#2 or #4 copper) bonding conductor
from your inside station ground (this might be in your basement) to your
electrical service entry ground. Also bond the AC service entry ground rod
to your outside coax entry grounding bulkhead. *If* you are able to
accomplish that, *and* you have good surge protection installed at 1: the AC
service panel, and 2. the point-of-use in your shack, then it would be safe
to leave the transmitter plugged into AC during a storm. Otherwise, no
matter how good your external grounding bulkhead and attached lightning
arrestors, there will still be a path for enough damaging potential from
ground to your radio, and out through the AC power cable. The critical
bonding conductor from radio to AC service entry helps but cannot eliminate
this path. Without it, there is no safe connection to AC power during a
storm, no matter how good the surge protection is.

You can explore these comments in greater detail at:
http://members.cox.net/pc-usa/station/grounding.htm

73,
Jack



Gerry Moersdorf October 25th 04 12:18 AM


"Jack Painter" wrote in message
news:pzWed.113241$Lo6.35776@fed1read03...
"Gerry Moersdorf" wrote
I am installing a G5RV antenna, and a new ground for my TS-2000. The

radio
is in the center of the house, and instead of running a long ground wire

to
a ground rod at the outside of the house, i was thinking of drilling a

hole
directly below the radio room in the basement floor and driving the

ground
rod there. That would make the ground wire only 6-8' long. Assuming i

do
not find a wastepipe while driving my ground, is there any issues with
getting a HF ground this way?


Gerry, if the G5RV is a non-radial using antenna (function is complete, as
in a dipole), then this so called RF ground from your transmitter will be

of
little if any use. If you ran ladder line to it directly from the
transmitter or tuner (and you were willing to tolerate RF in your shack

and
your home) maybe you do need an RF ground! G Assuming that's not the

case,
and you just want an RF ground anyway, the shortest path via minimum 3"

wide
copper strap would provide a good one, regardless of its basement location

Also, I was going to install lightning arrestors at the radio and ground
them to the new ground rod, is it better to place the lightning

arrestors
and an additional ground rod where the coax enters the house, or will

this
cause ground loop issues?

Thanks in advance to the collective wisdom of group.

Gerry KC8ZUL


Here is where you are mixing apples and oranges, because ground loops and
lightning protection are not related. The only time lightning arrestors
should ever be inside the shack is when they are immediately attached to

the
station single point ground *when that is inside the shack*. Mine is for
instance, but I am also alongside an outside wall under which is the
entry-point for all coax, and the shield-grounding point for same. If you
are transmitting from an interior room, far from the coax entry point to

the
home, then the coax shields should be grounded outside the home and
lightning arrestors installed there. The key is to have the lightning
arrestors on as short a connection to real earth ground as possible.
Preferably within 1' but in no cases more than 4' (via extremely low
impedance and high current capability connectors) from earth ground.

Your location indicates that an outside bulkhead (some call this a "ground
window") might be ideal. This would typically involve a copper plate
attached to the external coax entry point of the home. Bond this bulkhead
immediately to a minimum 5/8" x 8' ground rod (and bury the ground rod

top,
do not let it protrude above ground). Ground all coaxial cable shielding

to
the ground rod (or *heavy* strap leading to it) and attach the lightning
arrestors directly to the copper bulkhead above that. Then add a second

and
third ground rod, each fanning out from the first and a minimum of 12'

from
the first (16' is recommended).

If you are able to, install a very heavy (#2 or #4 copper) bonding

conductor
from your inside station ground (this might be in your basement) to your
electrical service entry ground. Also bond the AC service entry ground rod
to your outside coax entry grounding bulkhead. *If* you are able to
accomplish that, *and* you have good surge protection installed at 1: the

AC
service panel, and 2. the point-of-use in your shack, then it would be

safe
to leave the transmitter plugged into AC during a storm. Otherwise, no
matter how good your external grounding bulkhead and attached lightning
arrestors, there will still be a path for enough damaging potential from
ground to your radio, and out through the AC power cable. The critical
bonding conductor from radio to AC service entry helps but cannot

eliminate
this path. Without it, there is no safe connection to AC power during a
storm, no matter how good the surge protection is.

You can explore these comments in greater detail at:
http://members.cox.net/pc-usa/station/grounding.htm

73,
Jack


Jack and others,

Thanks for the weblink, this helped me understand what is going on with
grounding.

will go for external lightning grounds at feedlines, and extend the AC
safety ground to the shack. will give this a try !

gerry



Richard Clark October 25th 04 12:20 AM

On Sun, 24 Oct 2004 22:07:18 GMT, "Gerry Moersdorf"
wrote:

i was thinking of drilling a hole
directly below the radio room in the basement floor


Hi Gerry,

This is like punching a hole in the bottom of a boat. Can you guess
what might happen next?

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC

Irv Finkleman October 25th 04 04:59 AM

Richard Clark wrote:

On Sun, 24 Oct 2004 22:07:18 GMT, "Gerry Moersdorf"
wrote:

i was thinking of drilling a hole
directly below the radio room in the basement floor


Hi Gerry,

This is like punching a hole in the bottom of a boat. Can you guess
what might happen next?

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC


A hole through the floor is not always a good idea, especially if the place where you
drill is near the center of the foundation. The soil underneath is probably very dry
and of no value for any sort of ground.

Irv VE6BP
--
--------------------------------------
Diagnosed Type II Diabetes March 5 2001
Beating it with diet and exercise!
297/215/210 (to be revised lower)
58"/43"(!)/44" (already lower too!)
--------------------------------------
Visit my HomePage at http://members.shaw.ca/finkirv/index.html
Visit my Baby Sofia website at http://members.shaw.ca/finkirv4/index.htm
Visit my OLDTIMERS website at http://members.shaw.ca/finkirv5/index.htm
--------------------
Irv Finkleman,
Grampa/Ex-Navy/Old Fart/Ham Radio VE6BP
Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Richard Clark October 25th 04 06:44 AM

On Mon, 25 Oct 2004 03:59:17 GMT, Irv Finkleman
wrote:
A hole through the floor is not always a good idea, especially if the place where you
drill is near the center of the foundation. The soil underneath is probably very dry
and of no value for any sort of ground.


Hi Irv,

One might thinks so (dry), but this is the second hill I've lived on
the top of. The first one had a neighbor who had an underground
spring running through his basement. Here, I have two sump pumps with
a perimeter drain for the same reason.

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC

Richard Harrison October 25th 04 05:20 PM

Jack Painter wrote:
"Here is where you are mixing apples and oranges=A0because ground loops
and lightning protection are not related."

A ground loop is a potentially detrimental condition due to two or more
points in an elewctrical system that are nominally at ground potential
being connected by a conducting path.

A ground loop may provide a common impedance which couples energy
between two or more circuits. Strength of the energy in the electrical
circuits is immaterial in a current loop so long as nothing breaks down.
Response to the excitation is the same.

A lightning strike is a huge noise injection. Techniques for noise
reduction and testing are
also applicable to lightning suppression and may be tested with weak
noise signals. I know from personal experience.

It is desirable to avoid common impedances which can couple lightning
from one circuit to another, as a "ground loop" may.

Ground connections for protected equipments can be made with individual
wires between each of the devices and a common ground point to avoid
ground loops. This is not always practical.

It is usually practical to enclose devices inside a conductive
enclosure, then to low-pass filter and surge protect every wire which
penetrates the enclosure.

A screened room can serve as both noise and lightning protection, for
example.

Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI


Irv Finkleman October 25th 04 05:46 PM

Richard Clark wrote:

On Mon, 25 Oct 2004 03:59:17 GMT, Irv Finkleman
wrote:
A hole through the floor is not always a good idea, especially if the place where you
drill is near the center of the foundation. The soil underneath is probably very dry
and of no value for any sort of ground.


Hi Irv,

One might thinks so (dry), but this is the second hill I've lived on
the top of. The first one had a neighbor who had an underground
spring running through his basement. Here, I have two sump pumps with
a perimeter drain for the same reason.

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC


Wow! I'm on a hill too, but dry as a bone underneath the foundation. Fortunately
the soil around the house is moist and loamy.
Just wondeing -- is the spring salt water? :-)

Irv
--
--------------------------------------
Diagnosed Type II Diabetes March 5 2001
Beating it with diet and exercise!
297/215/210 (to be revised lower)
58"/43"(!)/44" (already lower too!)
--------------------------------------
Visit my HomePage at http://members.shaw.ca/finkirv/index.html
Visit my Baby Sofia website at http://members.shaw.ca/finkirv4/index.htm
Visit my OLDTIMERS website at http://members.shaw.ca/finkirv5/index.htm
--------------------
Irv Finkleman,
Grampa/Ex-Navy/Old Fart/Ham Radio VE6BP
Calgary, Alberta, Canada


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