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![]() "Bill Ogden" wrote I have several ground rods by the tower and one by the entry to my basement shack. The tower-to-entry-point has two #10 wires in the trench (but not not in the conduit) that connect the nearest of the tower ground rods to the entry-point rod. The distance is about 45'. From the entry point area to the rig is about 10' and has a single #10 wire. Also from the rig area to the electrical panel is another #10 wire that is about 40'. Is this a reasonable arrangement? Is it better than nothing? Worse than nothing? Hi Bill, it's reasonable and better than most, providing the following is also true: The coax shields grounded at the tower (min. at the bottom, best top and bottom), and again at the basement entrance single point ground. Shields must be grounded before connection to an arrestor. I will shortly place two ICE units at the entry point on the two coax lines from the tower. I am still considering what to do with the control lines --- there are 12 for a SteppIR, 6 for a rotator, and 6 for a remote coax switch. Bill W2WO ICE also makes protection for control lines. I have no experience with them in particular, but my six ICE coax arrestors have handled a lot of surge from several strikes less than 100' away, two of which were within 50' of antennas. I would also add that the importance of the bonding between shack single point ground and AC service entry point ground is critical to prevent ground potential rise (GPR) from a nearby strike's energy from going through your equipment via your own ground connections. The path in from ground and out through the back of your equipment AC power cords will always exist, but with proper bonding it will not be a destructive connection. Most stations have this station-ground to mains-ground bonding conductor outside the station, but I don't see the harm of having it inside either *if* it was a very short distance [yours is NOT SHORT]. The shorter the route for this bond the better, whatever path it may take. NEC requires it be less than 20'. Fat chance you say. Alternatives are to provide multiple ground rods along a 20' path of this critical bond. That means change your bonding conductor to run outside, from the station single point ground (rod), via a couple additional rods, to the AC mains service entry ground (rod). 73, Jack Painter Virginia Beach VA |
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