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"Brian Kelly" wrote Gary Schafer wrote No that won't do much good. If you ground the coax shield to the tower where it bends away from the tower you will have a much better (lower inductance) to ground with the tower than what the wire would provide. The wire would do almost no good at all when compared to the much larger tower in parallel. This is correct, and why I mentioned even 6" was "too much". It can be significant. Especially on a smaller tower. It took a few seconds to get your point but yes, it's a matter of how far up the tower the coax departs the tower as a percentage of the tower height. The last was not a correct assumption. The distance across a conductor (and in this case it is also the distance to ground) is what allows inductance to create deadly voltage potentials. Any conductor in series with a lightning strike will exhibit the same characteristics. 6" above ground near the base of a tower can translate to as much as 9800v above ground, with just modest assumptions of a very average return stroke current of 25Ka with a rise time of 40Ka/usec. It has no bearing whatsoever how tall or short the tower is. It's not long (or high above ground) before you could see over 100,000v potential develop where coax leaves any tower too soon. Bury it along with the cables. That will give you more contact with the earth as well as tying the grounds together. The wire will be there but I doubt that I'll be able to bury it. Burying a grounding electrode conductor is normally a code requirement. But that is not what you have in connecting the tower ground system to the station ground, AC mains ground, etc. Those are bonding conductors, and they are in many cases required to be insulated. Not in this case, but I want you to understand the difference between grounding, voltage division from many grounds, and a bonding conductor between your station and the tower. The latter is to maintain equipotential, and will not carry more than just equalizing currents. It will be well within the capability of a #6 insulated wire, should you choose to use that. Personally I would go a little larger but #6 is as largest that NEC or NFPA recommend for a bond in *most* cases. So burying the bonding conductor is not a requirement, although to protect it that is exactly what most facilities do. Neither will burying coax feedlines help in lightning protection, unless you are counting on them by design to be grounding electrode conductors! Pretty foolish but heh, if someone tosses feedlines out a window, they may as well short them to a ground rod and "bring it on". In that case any more than about 5,000v will breakdown the dialectric both inside and outside the coax, and anything nearby may be the next target before it ever reaches the ground rod. The good news is that the soil is eternally damp highly conductive dark loam . . Gary K4FMX That is very good news, and it makes your job easier. But good soil or poor soil, understanding what bonding provides is equally if not more important than having a ground rod at all. To rest on the laurels of highly conductive soil and ignore bonding, would be inviting disaster. Yes commercial tower design does require many shield "bonds" along the height of towers, but as I said, I applied a reasonable approach which the average short tower or mast-only owner could and would be likely to comply with - bonding at the top, bottom and station entrance. I suspect few go even that far. You may or may not be interested in all the surge protection diatribe in my website, but it's there because so many unfortunate souls were mislead in this area. I do think you might benefit from it's coverage of what bonding does to protect both you and your station, and it is a lot harder for most to get a hold of then simple mast or tower grounding. It doesn't have to be. http://members.cox.net/pc-usa/station/ground0.htm 73, Jack Painter Virginia Beach, VA |
On Sun, 21 Nov 2004 23:06:45 -0500, "Jack Painter"
wrote: "Brian Kelly" wrote Gary Schafer wrote No that won't do much good. If you ground the coax shield to the tower where it bends away from the tower you will have a much better (lower inductance) to ground with the tower than what the wire would provide. The wire would do almost no good at all when compared to the much larger tower in parallel. This is correct, and why I mentioned even 6" was "too much". It can be significant. Especially on a smaller tower. It took a few seconds to get your point but yes, it's a matter of how far up the tower the coax departs the tower as a percentage of the tower height. The last was not a correct assumption. The distance across a conductor (and in this case it is also the distance to ground) is what allows inductance to create deadly voltage potentials. Any conductor in series with a lightning strike will exhibit the same characteristics. 6" above ground near the base of a tower can translate to as much as 9800v above ground, with just modest assumptions of a very average return stroke current of 25Ka with a rise time of 40Ka/usec. It has no bearing whatsoever how tall or short the tower is. It's not long (or high above ground) before you could see over 100,000v potential develop where coax leaves any tower too soon. A little clarification here. When I said "smaller tower" I was not necessarily referring to a shorter tower but one that has less surface area. (smaller face) The main consideration is the distance up from ground that the cables leave the tower. A lightning strike is a constant current source. If it is a 20ka strike the voltage across whatever it hits is going to raise high enough to conduct 20ka. If you have a low impedance conductor (tower) the voltage developed across it will be less than it would be on a high impedance tower (smaller face tower). That is why large communication towers have less problems with lines coming off at higher points on the tower. More of the strike current makes it to ground via the tower with the larger surface it has. Leaving the tower at some height above ground with the cables is still a division of the voltage like a voltage divider. The higher up you are the higher the voltage you will see with respect to ground. But what determines what that actual voltage goes to is the amount of strike current and the amount of inductance between the cable exit point and ground. Of course the cables leaving the tower will also carry part of the current too. Bury it along with the cables. That will give you more contact with the earth as well as tying the grounds together. The wire will be there but I doubt that I'll be able to bury it. Burying a grounding electrode conductor is normally a code requirement. But that is not what you have in connecting the tower ground system to the station ground, AC mains ground, etc. Those are bonding conductors, and they are in many cases required to be insulated. Not in this case, but I want you to understand the difference between grounding, voltage division from many grounds, and a bonding conductor between your station and the tower. The latter is to maintain equipotential, and will not carry more than just equalizing currents. It will be well within the capability of a #6 insulated wire, should you choose to use that. Personally I would go a little larger but #6 is as largest that NEC or NFPA recommend for a bond in *most* cases. So burying the bonding conductor is not a requirement, although to protect it that is exactly what most facilities do. Neither will burying coax feedlines help in lightning protection, unless you are counting on them by design to be grounding electrode conductors! Pretty foolish but heh, if someone tosses feedlines out a window, they may as well short them to a ground rod and "bring it on". In that case any more than about 5,000v will breakdown the dialectric both inside and outside the coax, and anything nearby may be the next target before it ever reaches the ground rod. It doesn't matter what you want to call a ground conductor. The point here is if it can carry any lightning current you are much better off with it buried in the ground. A bare ground conductor making contact with the soil acts like additional ground rods. Why would you not want that? Burying coax feed lines will help with lightning protection. It greatly increases the inductance of the lines to lightning. It also helps to dissipate the energy to ground by the coupling provided. (ie you get less at the other end) You can't help but view them as "grounding electrode conductors" as you may want to call them. After all they are connected to the tower. They are going to carry lightning current if you want them to or not. Might as well let them dissipate part of the energy to earth. A large part of the lightning is RF. You have to treat it as such. A good lightning ground also makes a very good antenna ground system. ( buried radial system) Think in those terms. 73 Gary K4FMX The good news is that the soil is eternally damp highly conductive dark loam . . Gary K4FMX That is very good news, and it makes your job easier. But good soil or poor soil, understanding what bonding provides is equally if not more important than having a ground rod at all. To rest on the laurels of highly conductive soil and ignore bonding, would be inviting disaster. Yes commercial tower design does require many shield "bonds" along the height of towers, but as I said, I applied a reasonable approach which the average short tower or mast-only owner could and would be likely to comply with - bonding at the top, bottom and station entrance. I suspect few go even that far. You may or may not be interested in all the surge protection diatribe in my website, but it's there because so many unfortunate souls were mislead in this area. I do think you might benefit from it's coverage of what bonding does to protect both you and your station, and it is a lot harder for most to get a hold of then simple mast or tower grounding. It doesn't have to be. http://members.cox.net/pc-usa/station/ground0.htm 73, Jack Painter Virginia Beach, VA |
"Gary Schafer" wrote
It doesn't matter what you want to call a ground conductor. The point here is if it can carry any lightning current you are much better off with it buried in the ground. A bare ground conductor making contact with the soil acts like additional ground rods. Why would you not want that? Burying coax feed lines will help with lightning protection. It greatly increases the inductance of the lines to lightning. It also helps to dissipate the energy to ground by the coupling provided. (ie you get less at the other end) You can't help but view them as "grounding electrode conductors" as you may want to call them. After all they are connected to the tower. They are going to carry lightning current if you want them to or not. Might as well let them dissipate part of the energy to earth. A large part of the lightning is RF. You have to treat it as such. A good lightning ground also makes a very good antenna ground system. ( buried radial system) Think in those terms. 73 Gary K4FMX Hi Gary, the coax feedlines are definitely NOT grounding electrode conductors. Not only are they incapable of such by design and accordingly not authorized as grounding conductors, but they could never remain connected to sensitive equipment if it were so. Neither is the shielding on coax sufficient to provide equipotential bonding so they are not allowable bonding conductors either. If anyone wants to sacrifice their coax by not properly shield-grounding and installing the appropriate number of coax lightning arrestors (this means on the tower also) then they will turn them into very ineffective grounding conductors. Burying might help then, but only because you could guarantee a breakdown in the dialectric and where safer to have that happen than underground. I understand many operators allow this and simply toss them out the window, or ground them before a storm, but there is no good reason for it. Proper installation can allow them to remain connected to the equipment without sacrificing the coax or the equipment. Burying coax does not prevent induction by either capacitive or magnetic induction onto the shields of the coax from a nearby strike. If coax were enclosed in metal conduit that was grounded at each end, there would be protection from this. But proper installation of shield grounding and surge suppression at both ends maintains safe levels of energy on the feedline and allows its connection to sensitive equipment.Of course in rare cases there is sufficient energy (such as a 200Ka+ return stroke current) to overcome any level of protection. But protected stations will certainly fare a lot better in those rare events than the unprotected ones. 73, Jack Painter Virginia Beach VA |
On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 19:26:16 -0500, "Jack Painter"
wrote: "Gary Schafer" wrote It doesn't matter what you want to call a ground conductor. The point here is if it can carry any lightning current you are much better off with it buried in the ground. A bare ground conductor making contact with the soil acts like additional ground rods. Why would you not want that? Burying coax feed lines will help with lightning protection. It greatly increases the inductance of the lines to lightning. It also helps to dissipate the energy to ground by the coupling provided. (ie you get less at the other end) You can't help but view them as "grounding electrode conductors" as you may want to call them. After all they are connected to the tower. They are going to carry lightning current if you want them to or not. Might as well let them dissipate part of the energy to earth. A large part of the lightning is RF. You have to treat it as such. A good lightning ground also makes a very good antenna ground system. ( buried radial system) Think in those terms. 73 Gary K4FMX Hi Gary, the coax feedlines are definitely NOT grounding electrode conductors. Not only are they incapable of such by design and accordingly not authorized as grounding conductors, but they could never remain connected to sensitive equipment if it were so. Neither is the shielding on coax sufficient to provide equipotential bonding so they are not allowable bonding conductors either. If anyone wants to sacrifice their coax by not properly shield-grounding and installing the appropriate number of coax lightning arrestors (this means on the tower also) then they will turn them into very ineffective grounding conductors. Burying might help then, but only because you could guarantee a breakdown in the dialectric and where safer to have that happen than underground. I understand many operators allow this and simply toss them out the window, or ground them before a storm, but there is no good reason for it. Proper installation can allow them to remain connected to the equipment without sacrificing the coax or the equipment. Burying coax does not prevent induction by either capacitive or magnetic induction onto the shields of the coax from a nearby strike. If coax were enclosed in metal conduit that was grounded at each end, there would be protection from this. But proper installation of shield grounding and surge suppression at both ends maintains safe levels of energy on the feedline and allows its connection to sensitive equipment.Of course in rare cases there is sufficient energy (such as a 200Ka+ return stroke current) to overcome any level of protection. But protected stations will certainly fare a lot better in those rare events than the unprotected ones. 73, Jack Painter Virginia Beach VA What isolates the shield of the coax from carrying current? As long as it is connected to the tower at one end it is going to have strike current on it whether you want it there or not. Nothing you can do about it. Paralleling other conductors will reduce it's total current but you still have to deal with it on the coax line. If you don't want to call the coax shield a grounding conductor that's ok but that won't stop the current on it. Who told you that you should put lightning protectors at the tower as well as at the building entrance? What good do you think they do at the tower other than cost more money? If you use a radial system for a ground at the tower or several ground rods, the coax run under ground can do the same thing as a radial as far as dissipating part of the energy. Having a buried radial rather than one run in the air lets the ground soak up a lot more energy if it is buried. There will be much less energy at the far end of a buried radial than one run in the air. A radial run in the air will dissipate little energy to the ground. With buried coax the ground acts like a large choke on the cable also. Exactly what you want. The ground increases the cables natural inductance. This is the same reason that long radials are not as effective as more shorter ones in dissipating lightning energy. The inductance of the long wire gets too high and becomes less effective as a conductor. If you don't think that buried cables helps reduce lightning energy at the other end try running a single insulated feed wire for your long wire antenna underground. See how much attenuation it provides to the signals. Burying the coax does the same thing for part of the lightning energy. 73 Gary K4FMX |
"Gary Schafer" wrote
What isolates the shield of the coax from carrying current? As long as it is connected to the tower at one end it is going to have strike current on it whether you want it there or not. Nothing you can do about it. Paralleling other conductors will reduce it's total current but you still have to deal with it on the coax line. Incorrect. First, a strike termination device is placed higher than other equipment with its own down conductor. Then a lightning arrestor and shield bonding are specified at the top of the tower, shield bonding along the path (up to three times) and at the bottom, then more shield grounding and another lightning arrestor at the facility entrance. If you don't want to call the coax shield a grounding conductor that's ok but that won't stop the current on it. Current is maintained at a safe level on the coax center conductor and shielding by the above. Who told you that you should put lightning protectors at the tower as well as at the building entrance? What good do you think they do at the tower other than cost more money? National telecommunication companies who specify them in white papers and engineering plans for lightning protection. I have been studying these systems for 18 months now and find this procedure consistently applied. The specific information is proprietary but all I had to do was ask for it. I found the information available via the USAF and other agencies I normally deal with was somewhat old, so I started asking commercial companies what they currently use, and could I have copies of their plans. That's where this information comes from. That and the National Electrical Code and National Fire Protection Association, October 2004 editions. Studying the NEC 250 grounding and bonding and the NFPA-780 offers more information to safely operate communication sequipment, especially during thunderstorms, than all the amatuer radio operators advice put together. Most of the amatuers giving this advice have no personal understanding of why or how this works, they just repeat stories or instructions they heard from someone else. Probably the biggest collection of dangerous information ever shared is what hams offer about lightning protection. Even the ARRL which makes an incredible effort to educate at the issue, has information so old in many cases it has not been used in best available practice for over ten years. With buried coax the ground acts like a large choke on the cable also. Exactly what you want. The ground increases the cables natural inductance. /clipped Your mistaken on this stuff Gary, we either shed or prevent lightning energy from coax by shield grounding, surge protection devices and sometimes encasement in grounded conduit. No plan or specification calls for earth-burying coax to deliver what you promise, and I believe your theory is electrically impossible, unless as I said over and over, the dialectric breakdown occurs, which means the installation was improper in the first place, or overcome by statistically rare events. 73, Jack Painter Virginia Beach VA |
On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 22:42:20 -0500, "Jack Painter"
wrote: "Gary Schafer" wrote What isolates the shield of the coax from carrying current? As long as it is connected to the tower at one end it is going to have strike current on it whether you want it there or not. Nothing you can do about it. Paralleling other conductors will reduce it's total current but you still have to deal with it on the coax line. Incorrect. First, a strike termination device is placed higher than other equipment with its own down conductor. Then a lightning arrestor and shield bonding are specified at the top of the tower, shield bonding along the path (up to three times) and at the bottom, then more shield grounding and another lightning arrestor at the facility entrance. If you don't want to call the coax shield a grounding conductor that's ok but that won't stop the current on it. Current is maintained at a safe level on the coax center conductor and shielding by the above. Who told you that you should put lightning protectors at the tower as well as at the building entrance? What good do you think they do at the tower other than cost more money? National telecommunication companies who specify them in white papers and engineering plans for lightning protection. I have been studying these systems for 18 months now and find this procedure consistently applied. The specific information is proprietary but all I had to do was ask for it. I found the information available via the USAF and other agencies I normally deal with was somewhat old, so I started asking commercial companies what they currently use, and could I have copies of their plans. That's where this information comes from. That and the National Electrical Code and National Fire Protection Association, October 2004 editions. Studying the NEC 250 grounding and bonding and the NFPA-780 offers more information to safely operate communication sequipment, especially during thunderstorms, than all the amatuer radio operators advice put together. Most of the amatuers giving this advice have no personal understanding of why or how this works, they just repeat stories or instructions they heard from someone else. Probably the biggest collection of dangerous information ever shared is what hams offer about lightning protection. Even the ARRL which makes an incredible effort to educate at the issue, has information so old in many cases it has not been used in best available practice for over ten years. With buried coax the ground acts like a large choke on the cable also. Exactly what you want. The ground increases the cables natural inductance. /clipped Your mistaken on this stuff Gary, we either shed or prevent lightning energy from coax by shield grounding, surge protection devices and sometimes encasement in grounded conduit. No plan or specification calls for earth-burying coax to deliver what you promise, and I believe your theory is electrically impossible, unless as I said over and over, the dialectric breakdown occurs, which means the installation was improper in the first place, or overcome by statistically rare events. 73, Jack Painter Virginia Beach VA Jack, I don't think you really understand all you are reading. It sounds like you are digging up stuff designed to sell a lot of protection devices. As far as the NEC requiring grounding and bonding of structures, They want to be sure that there is a continuous bond on things they are concerned with. They don't always consider what they are grounding. Do you really think that placing a down conductor of #6 wire on a tower with a 6 or 8 foot face (big tower) is going to make any difference in the impedance path that the lightning is going to see. Each leg may be 2 or 3" in diameter itself. The impedance of the tower will be so much lower than that wire. The lightning won't know the difference whether that wire is there or not. Even if the added down conductor did carry a large part of the current it would get coupled to the tower anyway before it reached the bottom. That is what happens to the coax lines in reverse. Any energy that the tower is carrying is coupled to the coax lines whether they are grounded to the tower or not. You ground them at multiple points to prevent flashovers between the lines and the tower. You can not keep the lightning energy off the coax lines or any other lines coming down the tower. They are all mutual. When those lines leave the tower at the bottom they are going to have some energy on them unless you have a perfect ground at the bottom of the tower. A grounded antenna will keep voltage levels on the center conductor at a safe level. No need for a protection device at the top. I agree that there is a lot of mis-information on lightning floating around. But don't cut all the hams short either. Some of them have lots of experience in this area. Think about what you read rather than taking in mounds of propaganda and repeating it. Do you think that you can bury the feed wire for your long wire antenna and have it work very well? What do you think will happen to the RF on it? Will it make it all the way back to your receiver the same as it would if it were above ground? 73 Gary K4FMX |
Just a few thoughts on the subject. Lightning conductors are most accurately modelled as DC to HF transmission lines - which indeed is what they are. In addition to resistance they posses inductance, capacitance, a Zo and propagation constants depending on length and diameter. It takes time for a stroke to propagate down and along a set of conductors. It arrives at different times at different places in the system. The generator is a high impedance, pulsed current source of so many thousands of amps. The voltage developed between a conductor, another conductor, and what's in its environment is Zo times the stroke current. Volts can leap across gaps. Once in the ground current travels at a much slower velocity than along a wire. Voltages developed depend on arrival times at different places. A ground rod is a short length of line. Frequencies of 100's of kilohertz are involved. Even reflected volts and currents occur. Ground conductivity can be allowed for. Very crude approximations are involved. Nevertheless, any information about behaviour DURING a strike is better than none. It may be a matter of life and death. It would be interesting to calculate, for a given strike current, the difference in voltage between the front and rear legs of a cow standing near to and facing a grounded antenna mast. Radio hams, presumably endowed with more common sense, can always wear rubber boots while walking around their backyards carrying a field-strength meter in thunder storms. ---- Reg, G4FGQ |
Just another thought -
If a resourceful ham has no rubber boots he can always stand on one leg and hop. --- Reg |
Gary,
As far as the NEC requiring grounding and bonding of structures, They want to be sure that there is a continuous bond on things they are concerned with. They don't always consider what they are grounding. Do you really think that placing a down conductor of #6 wire on a tower with a 6 or 8 foot face (big tower) is going to make any difference in the impedance path that the lightning is going to see. I never suggested such a silly thing! You mistake an earlier reference I made to a bonding conductor. Down conductors are sized according to code standards which provides a minimum for given elevation categories. 3/0 wire which is close to 1/2" in dia is the largest reqirement in NEC sizing table 250.66. In telecommunication applications, down conductors are normally sized to equal or exceed the size of the feed lines, and this means larger sizing yet. It's bonding conductors that burying usually serves no purpose except protection. One bond that is an exception is the station ground to utility entrance ground - that bond will carry ground potential rise current that hopefully bypasses the power connection at the back of station equipment. It must remain low impedance and high current capability, so additional ground rods are required along that bond if farther than 20'. Don't sell the NEC short. NFPA, which oversees the National Electrical Code, doesn't specify maximum protection, it specifies minimum protection standards. Industry does better where it sees cost benefit from doing so. Even if the added down conductor did carry a large part of the current it would get coupled to the tower anyway before it reached the bottom. That is what happens to the coax lines in reverse. Any energy that the tower is carrying is coupled to the coax lines whether they are grounded to the tower or not. You ground them at multiple points to prevent flashovers between the lines and the tower. Actually this is bonding Gary, an important distinction to understand. A device is only grounded at a grounding electrode. All other connections are bonding for equipotential, to minimize voltage differences. The principles of bonding are not taught in the amateur radio or any other communications hobby. Only electrical enginners, electricians, and anyone who studies the electrical code and reference materials on bonding and grounding will understand this. It's hard to even communicate about lightning protection until the basics of protection by equipotential are understood, and this doesn't come from a casual read or anything learned in ham-world postings. At least not from what I've seen, which is about everything a search engine can find. You can not keep the lightning energy off the coax lines or any other lines coming down the tower. They are all mutual. When those lines leave the tower at the bottom they are going to have some energy on them unless you have a perfect ground at the bottom of the tower. A grounded antenna will keep voltage levels on the center conductor at a safe level. No need for a protection device at the top. I didn't write the specifications that major companies are using, and neither did the companies selling lightning protection, although I agree there is influence there. Professional Engineers write these to protect equipment, personnel, and maintain operations, maybe not in that order. If they specify arrestors at tower tops, they must be trying to avoid damage that was not protected without them. It is no guarantee that damage is eliminated by their presence, I'm just relaying their usage - now. I agree that there is a lot of mis-information on lightning floating around. But don't cut all the hams short either. Some of them have lots of experience in this area. I don't cut all hams short. Richard Harrison (resident guru here on RRA) and others are thanked on my website for great information, their experiences, and helpful answers to questions. Many hams provided me with details about damage to equipment, and their humble honesty cannot be thanked enough. I have written many the best of the amateur websites discussing grounding and offered suggestions and references to improve their quality . Here are a few excerpts you or others may have missed from the NEC: Article 810.51 of the current NFPA 70, which states in part... "810.58 Grounding Conductors - Amateur Transmitting and Receiving Stations. Grounding conductors shall comply with 810.58(A) through (C). (A) Other Sections. All grounding conductors for amateur transmitting and receiving stations shall comply with 810.21(A) through (J). (B) Size of Protective Grounding Conductor. The protective grounding conductor for transmitting stations shall be as large as the lead-in but not smaller than 10 AWG copper, bronze, or copper-clad steel. (C) Size of Operating Grounding Conductor. The operating grounding conductor for transmitting stations shall not be less than 14 AWG copper or its equivalent." and Article 810.15, which states "810.15 Grounding. "Masts and metal structures supporting antennas shall be grounded in accordance with 810.21." finally, 810.21, which states "810.21 Grounding Conductors - Receiving Stations. Grounding conductors shall comply with 810.21(A) through (J). (A) Material. The grounding conductor shall be of copper, aluminum, copper-clad steel, bronze, or similar corrosion-resistant material. Aluminum or copper-clad aluminum grounding conductors shall not be used where in direct contact with masonry or the earth or where subject to corrosive conditions. Where used outside, aluminum or copper-clad aluminum shall not be installed within 450 mm (18 in.) of the earth. (B) Insulation. Insulation on grounding conductors shall not be required. (C) Supports. The grounding conductors shall be securely fastened in place and shall be permitted to be directly attached to the surface wired over without the use of insulating supports. Exception: Where proper support cannot be provided, the size of the grounding conductors shall be increased proportionately. (D) Mechanical Protection. The grounding conductor shall be protected where exposed to physical damage, or the size of the grounding conductors shall be increased proportionately to compensate for the lack of protection. Where the grounding conductor is run in a metal raceway, both ends of the raceway shall be bonded to the grounding conductor or to the same terminal or electrode to which the grounding conductor is connected. (E) Run in Straight Line. The grounding conductor for an antenna mast or antenna discharge unit shall be run in as straight a line as practicable from the mast or discharge unit to the grounding electrode. /clipped 73, Jack Painter Virginia Beach VA |
Here is a quote from your previous post where the discussion was about the tower and lines carrying strike current. Jack Painter First, a strike termination device is placed higher than other equipment with its own down conductor. Your reply when questioned about placing a down conductor in parallel with the tower was: I never suggested such a silly thing! You mistake an earlier reference I made to a bonding conductor. As far as down conductors go you need to read farther to see what they are using them for. We are talking about towers here. No down conductors needed. If you are talking about a building or wooden pole mounted antenna then that's a different story. The applications of grounding and bonding principles are not reserved for an elite society of engineers and electricians as you might like to think. They are free and available to all. There are no secrets involved. Quoting a load of authoritative directives is not a substitute for understanding. It is a play of semantics when you say " an important distinction to understand the difference between bonding and grounding". I would guess that it does not take too much study to understand that real ground can not be half way up a tower. So whether you are "bonding" or "grounding" a cable on a tower, the end result is unmistakably the same. It seems that some of the discontinuity may come from lack of basic understanding of RF principles. Lightning is not just a direct current event that requires only consideration for high currents. As far as buried cables go: I will ask the same question again that you avoided from last time but instead provided mounds of quotes that do not address the point. "Do you think that you can bury the feed wire for your long wire antenna and have it work very well? What do you think will happen to the RF on it? Will it make it all the way back to your receiver the same as it would if it were above ground?" This is a very relevant to "buried coax lines". 73 Gary K4FMX |
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