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![]() "Richard Harrison" wrote in message ... Jerry wrote: "I know about some articles on the ARRL site, but was wondering if anyone else had some ideas or pointers on how to pratically do this?" Coax helps protect your radio from lightning. It rejects common-mode currents inside which might otherwise damage the radio. Thunderstorms often produce lightning from clouds charged to 100 million volts with respect to the earth. Current may oscilate up to 200 thousand amps in a lightning discharge. Temperature inside the stroke may reach 30 thousand degrees C (5x the temperature of the sun`s surface). A stroke starts and stops abruptly, so it contains r-f in addition to d-c. The discharge may take up to 150 milliseconds and consist of several flashes in both directions. It may include a path miles long, so it has a pretty good ionization trail for an antenna. If your antenna is struck by lightning, it is best to bypass the energy aroundb people and equipment. Medium wave stations have arc-gaps around the tower base insulators, Faraday screens between primary and secondary of tower r-f coupling transformers, and tower lighting chokes which keep both r-f and lightning out of the power mains. High frequency stations often use balanced wire lines, and these have an arc-gap from each wire to the earth at a point outside the station. VHF, UHF, and microwave stations use grounded antennas and coax. Towers which support the antenna generally have each tower leg separately grounded by a heavy cable to its own ground rod near the tower base. R-F cables and waveguide are grounded at the antenna and at least at the base of the tower. Coax nay be coiled with several turns between the tower base and the shack to discourage lightning on the outside of the coax from entry to the shack. Waveguide is solidly bonded to the tower but not usually coiled to make a lightning choke. The solid-state VHF, UHF, or microwave station often needs additional surge protection because of the difference in potential between electric service and antenna system grounds This takes the form of husky r-f chokes in each power wire to the r-f equipment. Each choke is shunted at each end to ground with a capacitor and with a voltage limiting device or devices, often MOV`s. There are ready-made brute force coil and capacitor low-pass pi-filters which need only addition of MOV`s to make them effective lightning suppressors. I made mine in an earlier time using Miller Coil Company tower lighting chokes and they worked well. You could wind 2 or 3 dozen turns of #12 or #14 insulated wire in an 8-in. dia. circle to make your own 0.1 millihenry chokes. The standard choke used to be 2.5 millihenry, but it is not critical. The same wiring techniques required for noise reduction apply to the biggest noise of all, lightning. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI An interesting fact that many don't know is that lightning actually strkes upwards as the clouds are negatively charged. -- Woody harrogate2 at ntlworld dot com |
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