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#1
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I understand that If the dipole is fed with coax, one leg is tied to the
outer coax shield. Regarding the end at the radio - Is the coax shield "always" tied directly to the radio's chassis ground, (which is also earth ground for my set) ? This is almost always the case. The coax shield may also be grounded at one or more locations between the antenna and the radio chassis (e.g. where it enters the building), for both RF-grounding and lightning-safety-grounding reasons. Or, are the outer and inner coax conductors sometimes fed into an isolation transformer, and therefore the coax shield would not connect directly to the radio chassis ? This can be done (with an isolated "unun" transformer) but it is rarely done. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
#2
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#3
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Bill Turner wrote:
As has been explained here many times before, you can not "RF ground" your coax in the sense of connecting it to earth ground. The wavelength of the ground wire prevents a true ground from happening. You do need a safety ground (for the AC mains) and a "ground" to your radio chassis, but that's all. I put "ground" in quotes because it isn't really connected to earth. The word "common" would be more accurate, but most hams think of their chassis as "ground". So be it, as long as the true condition is understood. "Ground" is one of the most misued terms among amateurs that I encounter. Somehow, labeling something "ground" imparts magic properties -- "grounded" things don't radiate, you can't get a shock or rf burn from "grounded" items, "grounded" items are free from the same rules that all other conductors must follow. None are true. If your rig is mains-powered, you need a mains safety ground, as Bill said. This effectively connects the equipment to the Earth at mains frequency. If lightning is a threat, you also need a lightning ground, which effectively connects your antenna to the Earth when lighning strikes the antenna or nearby. Making an effective safety ground is simple; making a lightning ground is an art and science in itself. If you have a balanced load for your rig (for example, a coax or twinlead feedline with equal and opposite currents on the two conductors), you don't need a "radio ground", that is, a low impedance connection between your radio and the Earth at radio frequencies. The only time you need one is if you've managed to make your rig a part of the antenna by allowing currents on the outside of a coax feedline, or unbalanced currents on a twinlead feedline. And getting this low impedance connection can be difficult -- or impossible, if multiple frequency bands are involved. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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