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In , w_tom wrote:
If in sandy loom, then a single ground rod may not be sufficient. Neighborhood history will apply. Previous lightning damage in the last ten years? If so, then the single point ground may be expanded with more rods; spaced as Frank suggests and to comply with NEC. Other alternatives include looping the house with a buried bare copper wire. But again, this is typically only required for high 'strike frequency' locations - more a function of neighborhood geology. Sandy loam is better than average not just for grounding, but also for ground-wave propogation and gardening. Regardless, it's the subsoil that really matters. Unless you live in the desert, one good rod is enough to provide a direction for the lightning to travel, which is the basic purpose. Any ground, even one in poor soil, can be improved by running radials from the rod, which is far better at dissipating a lightning strike than using multiple ground rods. The only exception to this is, as I stated before, when the main ground rod is located next to a basement. In that case, tie the ground rods together, but maintain a central grounding point at the main ground rod ('star' grounding). And avoid loops! A problem with the water idea is a loose ground rod. Again you are talking about things about which you know nothing. Most of the dirt that is displaced by the rod doesn't make it to the surface, although you do get wet while going down those first couple feet. The resulting mud settles down into the gap and hardens like concrete. Once you turn off the water and let it set for an hour or so, you couldn't pull the blasting thing out with a backhoe. And there is only about a foot or two near the surface that needs to be filled which is easily done by rinsing the muddy splatter back into the hole. A ground rod must be firm in ground when installed. A loose ground rod is not earthed. Ground rod is further compromised if using threaded joints. If the threads were exposed it would probably -improve- the efficiency of the ground by increasing the surface area. But since they aren't, the point is moot. Ground rod should be monolithic until well below frost line. Pipes burst when water is trapped as it freezes. Both the top and bottom of the pipe are open, therefore no bursting. And since the bottom is open, there should be no standing water to freeze -- unless you put it there just to make your life more complicated. If antenna is not located near to service entrance and single point ground, then antenna may require its own earth ground. This in addition to the coax ground. IOW either the antenna is part of your structure and earthed at the service entrance ground; or antenna is earthed as if a lightning rod. Depends on the antenna. If the antenna connection to earth ground is significantly shorter than connection to service entrance, then antenna must also have its own earth ground rod located as directly under the antenna as possible. This so that lightning takes a short path to earth; does not seek alternative paths via other items such as chimney or interior wire. First off, if the line from the antenna to the grounding rod is shorter than the line from the grounding rod to the shack, it might be time to do a little research on alternative antenna systems. Second, and it seems you missed this point the first three times, electricity (lightning included) will take ANY AND ALL paths to ground that are available. It will easily jump from an antenna to a chimney, interior wire, plumbing vent, phone line, or anything else it finds to be a convenient path to earth AS WELL AS the antenna! Anytime the voltage in the path = the spark-gap potential it WILL arc, and to whatever it arcs WILL become a parallel current path. If you think that all the current will go to the closest ground rod and ignore any electrically connected ground path further away, or any other potential ground path connected or not, then you have ABSOLUTELY NO CLUE what you are talking about regarding electricity. If installing for commercial broadcaster reliability, then the inductor from center core is additional protection. But most industry professionals say the center conductor will leak sufficiently to the outer shield making no center conductor connection necessary..... Well, I'm going to stop here because this is worse than beating a dead horse. You clearly don't know what you are talking about, and you are very bad at making stuff up to try and hide your ignorance. I don't know what your motivation is to spew your BS but there is no excuse for it. Even if you are a vampire and the public library is only open during daylight hours, or you are permanently confined to your bubble, or too fat to get out your front door, you can still have a friend get some educational materials for you. Or have you ****ed off all your friends by feeding them the same BS that you are trying to pass off in here? Don't bother answering, because I really don't care and it would probably be more BS anyway. Just a word of advice: Most of the people in this newsgroup aren't as technically gullible as you might think (at least not any more). If you want to show people how intelligent you -really- are, quit with the BS and learn a little more about the subject. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
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