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I don't know that I buy your statement that ground losses aren't
extremely important for receiving applications. Antenna systems are bi-directional. If you lose xdB of transmitted sigal due to ground losses, then you are also going to lose xdB of received signal due to ground losses. A more important issue is that ground losses are very important when receiving a lightning strike. It may be effective to bury several runs of bare #6 copper in trenches radiating from your "ground point". The QTH here is located on a solid rock slab. All grounding is through buried #6 wires and a few ground rods driven laterally between the rock layers up by the tower base. Regards, Ed On 11 Apr 2006 12:46:24 -0700, " wrote: Hi Bob, Ground losses aren't extremely important for receiving applications. A few extra feet of depth of ground rod isn't going to make any difference, because the RF doesn't flow 8 feet down, or 5 feet down, but more flows on the surface of the ground and/or some inches down (depending on your ground conductivity profile) As such, you could try a 4 or 5 foot ground rod. If you want a no-pounding solution instead, lay down a few radial wires. The length and number aren't critical. Try four or eight wires each 1/8 wavelength long at the lowest frequency of interest. If the noise in your receiver doesn't increase when you plug the antenna into the RX , then you may want a better ground system. If the noise DOES increase, then your noise floor is that of the natural/artificial noise that your antenna is picking up, and more raw signal from the antenna won't help anything. (Though moving the antenna around might). 73, Dan N3OX www.n3ox.net |
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