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#1
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Bob Miller wrote:
"Is there a good layman`s book on grounding amateur gear?" The ARRL Handbook for starters, My newest is the 1987 edition. It has several pages of good suggestions on "The National Electrical Code", protective devices, and lightning protection. They suggest books and pamphlets to request for planning your installation. There is no big disparity between lightning protection and electrical noise abatement. The techniques are almost the same. I`ve checked lightning prepared status by checking noise rejection capability. Lightning is an enormous noise. Want complete protection? Seal your protected treasure inside a seamless box constructed of highly-conductive sturdy material. No wires enter and no wires leave. No noise, no lightning, and no damage to the contents either. Now, bring wires through the box but use a series impedance in each (a choke), and use a shunt admittance (a capacitor) between each wire and the box. Better yet, confine the area where wires enter and leave the box to a small space or window so that all the ground connections can be made in the same spot. Again, no noise, no lightning, and no damage to contents inside the box. It works. I`ve done it. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
#2
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I should have advised you to clamp the voltage on each wire entering
your lightning protected enclosure to a safe maximum voltage for that wire. The ARRL Handbook mentions several appropriate devices, fast acting and proper breakdown voltage range to protect your equipment. These protectors are used in addition to the filtering which is used for low-level noise elimination. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
#3
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Richard Harrison wrote:
"Is there a good layman`s book on grounding amateur gear?" The ARRL Handbook for starters, My newest is the 1987 edition. It has several pages of good suggestions on "The National Electrical Code", protective devices, and lightning protection. They suggest books and pamphlets to request for planning your installation. There is also plenty of information on the ARRL website. The ARRL Technical Information Service contains good information on a huge range of technical questions: http://www.arrl.org/tis/ For an overview on grounding, and how the separate requirements for mains safety, lightning and RF grounding join together, start with: http://www.arrl.org/tis/info/grounding.html Searching the whole ARRL site for "grounding" brings up other references as well. By the way, almost all homes in the UK are categorically exempt from specific lightning protection requirements in the Wiring Regulations... but that also means we are not very lightning-conscious, and UK radio amateurs tend to be very careless about bonding of mains earths and RF earths. This is a case where we'd do much better to follow US earthing principles, if we possibly can. -- 73 from Ian G3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
#4
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![]() "Ian White G3SEK" wrote in message ... Richard Harrison wrote: "Is there a good layman`s book on grounding amateur gear?" The ARRL Handbook for starters, My newest is the 1987 edition. It has several pages of good suggestions on "The National Electrical Code", protective devices, and lightning protection. They suggest books and pamphlets to request for planning your installation. There is also plenty of information on the ARRL website. The ARRL Technical Information Service contains good information on a huge range of technical questions: http://www.arrl.org/tis/ For an overview on grounding, and how the separate requirements for mains safety, lightning and RF grounding join together, start with: http://www.arrl.org/tis/info/grounding.html Searching the whole ARRL site for "grounding" brings up other references as well. By the way, almost all homes in the UK are categorically exempt from specific lightning protection requirements in the Wiring Regulations... but that also means we are not very lightning-conscious, I like that "we" bit. "We" of the U.K are quite aware that if the U.K.was "careless" Condoleeza Rice or Bush would not hesitate to quickly let us know. And would threaten the U.K. with sanctions if it did not come to heel and change it's practices with lightning speed.. Art and UK radio amateurs tend to be very careless about bonding of mains earths and RF earths. This is a case where we'd do much better to follow US earthing principles, if we possibly can. -- 73 from Ian G3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
#5
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Art Unwin wrote:
"We" of the U.K. are quite aware that if the U.K. was "careless" Condoleza Rice or Bush would not hesitate to quickly let us know." I think not. No "shock and awe" for our U.K. peerless allies. The U.S. just got a head start on lightning from our Bold Ben Franklin. Luckily he survived. Then, after a Louisiana Purcjase and wars with Mexico and Spain, it won tropical territories which are rife with lightning. I know the sun never sets on the British Empire. It`s just not the same when lightning tradhes some Zulu`s hut as when it strikes your own digs. Lots of Americans live in Tampa-St. Petersburg. This one spot holds the world record for lightning. I think the U.S.A. had more motivation to mitigate the lightning problem. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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