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Ground resistance tester
I was wondering if anyone built some sort of ground resistance tester? I
read that the NEC requires 25 Ohms or less.. But I don't understand how to measure that. I certainly could use a ohm meter between a ground rod and the test subject, but then the ground rod I use as a reference could be faulty.. It seems to me it must be measured in some other manner. Maybe low frequency signal and then measure how much it's absorbed in the earth?.. I know they sell a clamp on ground resistance tester for big bucks. Considering it's a clamp on, it certainly don't have any external reference.. Anyway, I was wondering if anyone had any experience with these testers and maybe building one? Joe AG4QC |
Ground resistance tester
Ground resistance varies considerably with frequency, and at HF it can
be very different from the DC or 60 Hz value. (For example, pure water is virtually lossless at DC and low frequency, but very lossy at HF.) And in order to get a decent representation of ground, you also have to know its dielectric constant. The only reasonably accurate method I know of to make these measurements is a system using a buried transmission line, called an OWL tester. I've never seen or used one, just read some papers where it was used. If your need is for an NEC model, you should realize that the skin depth of current in soil in the HF range is on the order of 10 - 20 feet, meaning that significant current exists to well below this depth. Soil is seldom homogeneous, so to make an accurate representation of real soil, you'd have to test the soil at various depths down to perhaps 30 - 50 feet or so, then make up some sort of average value for the program to use. I don't believe any single average value will really be a good representation of a typical stratified ground. So the bottom line is that even if you could accurately measure the surface soil conductivity, you wouldn't have enough information for an accurate model. And in fact, even if you could measure the conductivity and dielectric constant to a great depth, the model still wouldn't be very good because of its assumption that the soil is homogeneous. About the best you can do with currently available software is to estimate the best and worst likely soil characteristics which might occur from the surface to a few tens of feet depth. Run simulations with both. The antenna performance will probably end up somewhere between the results of the two. Even that isn't guaranteed, though, since any single value probably isn't adequate to represent a stratified ground. Ground modeling is the weak point of all NEC-type programs. Don't put too much weight on results which are strongly dependent on ground characteristics. Roy Lewallen, W7EL AG4QC wrote: I was wondering if anyone built some sort of ground resistance tester? I read that the NEC requires 25 Ohms or less.. But I don't understand how to measure that. I certainly could use a ohm meter between a ground rod and the test subject, but then the ground rod I use as a reference could be faulty.. It seems to me it must be measured in some other manner. Maybe low frequency signal and then measure how much it's absorbed in the earth?.. I know they sell a clamp on ground resistance tester for big bucks. Considering it's a clamp on, it certainly don't have any external reference.. Anyway, I was wondering if anyone had any experience with these testers and maybe building one? Joe AG4QC |
Ground resistance tester
Apparently Joe is talking about contact resistance between a grounding rod
and the soil. Is that correct, Joe? I also saw those ground rod clamp testers in the Inet, and is still puzzled how they claim accuracy down to 0.01 Ohm. Thks, Ivan |
Ground resistance tester
Well, yes that's true.. In this case I was talking about the NEC (National
Electrical Code).. Sort of a basic electrical question, from a ham radio prospective. They put up a Satellite Internet dish on my roof and it was too far away from the 'Service' protective ground so it's not grounded. So I ran my own bonding ground wire to tie it into the rest of my single point grounding system. It started me wondering just how affective all these ground rods were, even though they are all bonded together. So that started me looking around for a way to measure the resistance to ground, as I figure the less the better. Of course, in this case I am talking about 'protective' ground as required in the NEC handbook. The electricians around here eyes glaze over when I ask about the 25 ohm or less requirement. So I figured maybe someone on here had experience measuring the required ground.. It would be my luck the house would take a minor lightning hit and the Insurance company would try to weasel out of there responsibilities by saying the ground didn't meet the NEC requirements not to mention I rather not have issues. While unlikely, I hear all sorts of horror stories on how they are trying to disallow claims for all sorts of reasons after Katrina. Joe AG4QC "Ivan Makarov" wrote in message ... Apparently Joe is talking about contact resistance between a grounding rod and the soil. Is that correct, Joe? I also saw those ground rod clamp testers in the Inet, and is still puzzled how they claim accuracy down to 0.01 Ohm. Thks, Ivan |
Ground resistance tester
On Sun, 4 Dec 2005 21:11:23 -0500, "Ivan Makarov"
wrote: Apparently Joe is talking about contact resistance between a grounding rod and the soil. Is that correct, Joe? I also saw those ground rod clamp testers in the Inet, and is still puzzled how they claim accuracy down to 0.01 Ohm. Thks, Ivan Accuracy as in reading + or - 0.01 vs reading of 0.01 ohms absolute - very big difference in technology involved. ;-) You have to define what they are doing. |
Ground resistance tester
So I figured maybe someone on here had
experience measuring the required ground.. Well, not a lot of experience, but the keywords you're looking for are "fall of potential". Depending on which spec you're meeting, you drive multiple ground rods in at distances that are large compared to the length of the rods. Then you measure the resistance between the rods. Just sticking your ohmmeter leads between two ground rods is not good enough. There is a substantial chunk of 60Hz AC and probably some DC current flowing in the ground and the little battery inside the ohmmeter will generally add nothing. Fall-of-potential meters use much larger currents (and usually measurement techniques, like using an AC frequency unrelated to 60Hz and harmonics) to overcome this. My impression with antenna installations that I've been peripherally involved in is that NEC requirements (25 ohms) are generally easy to meet unless you've got dry rocky soil. And that the 25-ohm requriement is nowhere near good enough to protect your equipment/buildings from a direct hit. Tim. |
Ground resistance tester
If a 60 Hz measurement is the only physical test that is available, that is
better than nothing. The experts say that is useless, but I do not agree 100%. Once upon a time I used a 12.6 V 60 Hz transformer and an AC ammeter to measure the current between some ham radio ground rods and the building utility ground and then calculated a resistance value of about 16 ohms. The substantial current flow helped to overcome an initial high value of resistance. The ground path did not seem to be perfectly linear at very low current values. What the 2 to 30 MHz values were I have no idea. A high power (100 W ) HF signal and an RF ammeter would have been a better approach. This test has to be carefully designed to reduce HF impedance effects. The best approach, I believe, is to use an antenna design that does not utilize a ground path return impedance. In a balanced system the return current is through a transmission line, not the earth. A multi-wire ground plane with a transmission line return path is also a good approach that is very often used. Common-mode currents that try to return on the outside of the transmission line must be attenuated using a current balun. Bill W0IYH "AG4QC" wrote in message ... I was wondering if anyone built some sort of ground resistance tester? I read that the NEC requires 25 Ohms or less.. But I don't understand how to measure that. I certainly could use a ohm meter between a ground rod and the test subject, but then the ground rod I use as a reference could be faulty.. It seems to me it must be measured in some other manner. Maybe low frequency signal and then measure how much it's absorbed in the earth?.. I know they sell a clamp on ground resistance tester for big bucks. Considering it's a clamp on, it certainly don't have any external reference.. Anyway, I was wondering if anyone had any experience with these testers and maybe building one? Joe AG4QC |
Ground resistance tester
It sounds to me like you are looking for legal advice, not technical
advice. With that in mind, and a lot of bad experience with lightning, I take the attitude that the NEC establishes the minimums for protection. After all, what can an extra ground hurt? Last summer I had lightning rods installed on my house. I live on a low ridge and have taken several (expensive) hits over the last few years. They installed ground rods on two corners of the house and tied one of them to the service ground. They also tied the Antenna tower to the opposite ground rod. I added another ground (#6 wire) from the Cable TV ground rod to the service ground. I also tied the Cable TV ground to the ground rod on the invisible fence (dog containment) with #6 wire. With all of that I still don't have a good RF ground. I hope to put up a vertical antenna soon and the first thing I need to do is establish a system of radials. Of course, the first wire will be a #6 to the service ground. BTW, I don't understand "too far away from the service ground to be connected." John Ferrell W8CCW On Sun, 4 Dec 2005 21:06:16 -0600, "AG4QC" wrote: Well, yes that's true.. In this case I was talking about the NEC (National Electrical Code).. Sort of a basic electrical question, from a ham radio prospective. They put up a Satellite Internet dish on my roof and it was too far away from the 'Service' protective ground so it's not grounded. So I ran my own bonding ground wire to tie it into the rest of my single point grounding system. It started me wondering just how affective all these ground rods were, even though they are all bonded together. So that started me looking around for a way to measure the resistance to ground, as I figure the less the better. Of course, in this case I am talking about 'protective' ground as required in the NEC handbook. The electricians around here eyes glaze over when I ask about the 25 ohm or less requirement. So I figured maybe someone on here had experience measuring the required ground.. It would be my luck the house would take a minor lightning hit and the Insurance company would try to weasel out of there responsibilities by saying the ground didn't meet the NEC requirements not to mention I rather not have issues. While unlikely, I hear all sorts of horror stories on how they are trying to disallow claims for all sorts of reasons after Katrina. Joe AG4QC "Ivan Makarov" wrote in message ... Apparently Joe is talking about contact resistance between a grounding rod and the soil. Is that correct, Joe? I also saw those ground rod clamp testers in the Inet, and is still puzzled how they claim accuracy down to 0.01 Ohm. Thks, Ivan John Ferrell W8CCW |
Ground resistance tester
AG4QC wrote:
I was wondering if anyone built some sort of ground resistance tester? I read that the NEC requires 25 Ohms or less.. But I don't understand how to measure that. I certainly could use a ohm meter between a ground rod and the test subject, but then the ground rod I use as a reference could be faulty.. It seems to me it must be measured in some other manner. Maybe low frequency signal and then measure how much it's absorbed in the earth?.. I know they sell a clamp on ground resistance tester for big bucks. Considering it's a clamp on, it certainly don't have any external reference.. Anyway, I was wondering if anyone had any experience with these testers and maybe building one? Joe AG4QC I think others have touched on the key requirement of testing at least three grounds rods. Then from the three (or more) readings you can determine each resistance value. As others have pointed out you probably need a high current to mask the other currents in the soil. Cheers. Bill K7NOM |
Ground resistance tester
Here is a good overview technical article that discussing earth grounding
and how to measure it. This info is for 60Hz AC system and equipment grounding saftey and protection grounding, not antenna ground systems. Be sure to look at the pictures and figures. http://www.duncaninstr.com/Gr_article.htm Here is another useful paper. Item number 14, Ground System Testing. http://www.kilowattclassroom.com/ArchiveCatalog.htm Ronnie, N5CSE "AG4QC" wrote in message ... I was wondering if anyone built some sort of ground resistance tester? I read that the NEC requires 25 Ohms or less.. But I don't understand how to measure that. I certainly could use a ohm meter between a ground rod and the test subject, but then the ground rod I use as a reference could be faulty.. It seems to me it must be measured in some other manner. Maybe low frequency signal and then measure how much it's absorbed in the earth?.. I know they sell a clamp on ground resistance tester for big bucks. Considering it's a clamp on, it certainly don't have any external reference.. Anyway, I was wondering if anyone had any experience with these testers and maybe building one? Joe AG4QC |
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