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On Mon, 15 Dec 2003 13:51:49 -0600, Cecil Moore
wrote: Andy Cowley wrote: All good stuff, Cecil, but I'd say that was lightening avoidance not protection. I still don't believe there is an effective method of lightening protection for an amateur station that will accept a direct strike and survive. Even your method would probably result in a fried antenna ;-) Hope you never find out! I've been back in Texas for about 5 years now and the only thing that has gotten fried was a five-foot-tall live oak tree, the shortest thing around. Go figure. It's still struggling to stay alive with half its branches dead and a burn mark down the trunk. My system gets hit about 3 times a year. So far I've only lost the front end out of a 2-meter rig and some coax. Since installing the new tower I've not lost any radio gear, but I did get one computer fried. http://www.rogerhalstead.com/ham_files/tower.htm shows the tower and antennas, but not the ground system. There are currently 30, 8' ground rods and over 600 feet of bare #2 copper tying the whole works together. Unfortunately we had to have some septic work done. When digging out the tank they hooked the ground system. Pulled out a section of the basement wall and cracked a whole bunch of it. The wall is temporarily repaired, but we are going to have to replace the entire wall this coming season. IF you have a fast connection the view from the top of the tower http://www.rogerhalstead.com/ham_files/tower.htm panorama. It's over 19 megs and would take forever on dial up. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair?) www.rogerhalstead.com Return address modified due to dumb virus checkers |
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