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On Wed, 17 Dec 2003 00:05:58 -0500, "Jack Painter"
wrote: "Andy Cowley" wrote Here are some interesting links. http://www.weighing-systems.com/Tech...Lightning1.pdf http://www.lightningsafety.com/nlsi_lhm/NFP_780.html http://www.kolacki.com/MIL-STD-464.htm Excellent reading, thanks. And thanks to all who contributed. In all these informative discussions, the precautions seem to be centered only around towers. My HF antennas consist of 3 long wires and 1 dipole suspended from and between pine trees, all some 80' in the air. Of course disconnecting constantly in thunderstorm season works, but should the feedlines all be connected to a ground system outside at time of disconnect? Is grounding a dipole for instance just guaranteeing a fry job when there might have been only dielectric-puncture? The latter is certainly an easer repair. I would think grounding might help to disintegrate the Balun also - but you guys are clearly the experts so I look forward to your advice. As far as rooftop antennas go, I now plan a much better down conductor system than the rado shack aluminum ground wires that probably melt just a wee bit slower than solder ;-) Although some have already addressed part of the issue with wire antennas, I'll try to elaborate a bit without repeating...and will probably fail...but... Two things about ungrounded wire antennas and ungrounded verticals. Static electricity (precipitation static) and lightening strikes (nearby and direct hits) BE it rain of snow and snow is particularly bad, just the precipitation and build many thousands of volts on an antenna. Some years back...welllll...actually quite a few (back in 1966) I was in the process of living in a mobile home while building a new home. I had a 40 meter quarter was vertical set up about 100 feet from the trailer. The station was used on the kitchen counter and stored in a broom closet. One evening as we st there watching television I heard a popping noise. It was pretty loud. A bit of searching showed the noise to be coming from the closet. When I opened the door I was greeted by a blue white flash accompanied by a loud "pop". The static was arcing across the PL259 with enough current that the arc was extending a good half to one inch out from the connector and it put any ignition I've ever used to shame. That includes some pretty strong magnetos. To top it off the thing was flashing every few seconds. Now this was one of those things where the choke across the coax connector would have bled off the charge big as it was. A lightening arrestor (spark gap) would have kept the voltage down, but most likely would not have protected a receiver input without a choke across the connection. Nearby lightening strikes do something similar for ungrounded antennas although they also induce a current in grounded ones as well. Now we are getting into the realm where the choke across the terminals may not be enough to protect the rig and I'm assuming the rig is properly grounded. That a protective device across the input will protect the rig is some what problematic. It just depends on the strength of the induced voltage and current. OTOH, some protection is better than no protection. Now as to direct hits to wire antennas and ungrounded verticals. There are precautions to take such as cable routing and grounding of the shield at the base of the antenna and prior to entering the house/ham shack, but again these come with no guarantee. *Generally* installations using a few wire antennas and ungrounded verticals are configured in such a way that the antennas can be disconnected. With these stations I would always disconnect and ground the coax. Then unplug the AC mains from the station. I would resort to one other step which is to ground any other cables and even rotor cables if any exist. The easiest way to ground a group of coax cables is to take three aluminum plates (or copper). clamp the plates together and drill them to take bulkhead connectors (the clamping only assures the connectors will properly align after the thing is assembled.) One plate is for the connectors going into the house, one is for the coax cable connectors from the antennas and the third is for the grounding. I should really make one of these up and shoot some photos to show how well they can work. At any rate, The plates can be configured several ways as long as it allows the user to unplug the cables from the antennas from the house and plug it into the grounding plate. The slip on PL-259 equivalents work very well for this. The same thing can be done one cable at a time, but I find that with a rapidly approaching storm I'd not want to be spending time disconnecting one cable at a time and then reconnecting said cables to a grounded set of connectors. I'd go so far as to attach a pair of rack panel handles to the one plate to allow for easy unplugging and reinserting it into the grounding receptacle. I's also ground the metal plate that holds the feed throughs into the house and install PolyPhasers for each line. it and the grounding receptacle both need to be thoroughly grounded and make no sudden or sharp turns in the cables. Another tract would be to have all cables enter the house through a well grounded panel using bulkhead connectors and PolyPhaser. By well grounded I don't mean tieing the plate to a single ground rod with a #8 wire, but rather bonding the plate to at least two 8' ground rods and connecting those to a grounding network. Even then in this kind of installation I'd consider disconnecting the cables and grounding them. BTW, ground rods can be easy to install if you don't have rocky soils, by using a hydraulic drill. (Another thing I need to write up and photograph). Actually I have the photos. I just need to write up how to make and use one. Maybe soon. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair?) www.rogerhalstead.com Return address modified due to dumb virus checkers Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair?) www.rogerhalstead.com Return address modified due to dumb virus checkers Jack Virginia Beach |
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