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#1
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After almost 50 years banging around Ham Radio I finely have my tower up.. I
have each leg of the tower grounded with 2 inch copper strapping , each to their own ground rod.Those ground rods are all connected together and run off to another ground rod I will use that as a common ground. All the coax that come into the house goes to a outside 5x5 box that has poliphaseres installed in it. The box is brass lined and the brass is lapped to another 2 inch copper strap that goes to the common ground. The station ground is separate until it gets to the common ground.. With all this said,I have a questions.. - I 'should' have the power entrance ground run over to the common ground. But it's over 90 feet away and the house has plastic water pipes.. Does it make sense to run a copper wire or strap that far? If so, should it be berried all the way or run exposed. It seems to me the impedance would be so high in the run, that it would be a waste of copper? TNX Joe AG4QC |
#2
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On Tue, 13 Sep 2005 22:49:27 -0500, "Joel" wrote:
I 'should' have the power entrance ground run over to the common ground. Hi Joe, Yes, you 'should,' but only if you find life worth living. But it's over 90 feet away and the house has plastic water pipes.. Does it make sense to run a copper wire or strap that far? The 'should' of you 'should' is a requirement of code that is in place to save your life. It is not there because it has to make sense as an RF ground lead. If so, should it be berried all the way or run exposed. It seems to me the impedance would be so high in the run, that it would be a waste of copper? Buried wire will provide an excellent safety ground, but it cannot be the only safety ground (again code dominates the implementation). And again, impedance is immaterial to the discussion. If you want an excellent RF ground, you lay radials, but you connect that ground to the safety ground for other reasons. One reason is a mighty big charge called lightning. Another reason is ground differentials (which occur naturally with sometimes lethal differences for normal weather, and in great potential differences with lightning). If you had two regions separately grounded, and their only interconnect was a length of coax cable between them, the common being on the shield, AND if there were a potential difference between the sites (or a considerable current shunt presented by the coax); then the first time you pulled the connection on that link you might get electrocuted. If you want to be a system fuse, what you be rated for? 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#3
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You should have all grounds tied together with a minimum of # 6 copper. It
is cheap. It is easy. It is code. It will save your equipment and you will never know the trouble you did not have! -- John Ferrell http://DixieNC.US "Joel" wrote in message ... ... - I 'should' have the power entrance ground run over to the common ground. But it's over 90 feet away and the house has plastic water pipes.. Does it make sense to run a copper wire or strap that far? If so, should it be berried all the way or run exposed. It seems to me the impedance would be so high in the run, that it would be a waste of copper? TNX Joe AG4QC |
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