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On Apr 17, 2:21*pm, "Michael" wrote:
"Michael" wrote in message ... Hiya... Hiya... Got the 6' solid brass ground rod and 24' ground strap today from ICE. *We have clear weather forecast here for Saturday, so I plan to pound it into the ground. *I'll mount the balun to the foundation low to the ground and connect the ground strap. *I ordered 100' spool of antenna wire and a 100' length of coax. *If they arrive in the next day, I'll be able to put it up Saturday along with the balun and ground spike. *Then I can test it out Saturday night. *If I don't get the antenna wire and other goodies by the weekend, it will have to wait another week for completion and testing. * I'm glad I also have the 102' G5RV to test it against. *That antenna is currently laying on my roof in the shape of a sigma. *I plan to leave it as is. I'd say the 6' brass rod into the earth is a better ground then the brick chimney, but I don't think it will out perform the whole uncooked chicken. I'm still not sure if I should also ground the radio in the shack. *The radio is on the second floor in the house, so any ground wire would have to be about *75' long to reach the spike, unless I just ground it to the iron radiator... or a chicken. *I use a six receiver, six radio MFJ- 1700C switch to go between antennas and my two radios. *The new properly grounded inverted L will always be hooked up to the switch along with both my radios and all antennas. *Given that one antenna is well grounded and all items are hooked up to the same switch via shielded PL-259, will the other radios and antennas benefit from that one single grounded antenna ??? Forgive me for being a total retard here... My first ever antenna was a roll of aluminum foil and an alligator clip :-) I'm making some progress... Mike D Michael, In the location where you plan on sticking your Ground Rod : Take the time today to dig down about a Foot Deep and a Foot around {Hole} and Fill the Hole with Water Today, Friday and Saturday {Soak the Ground}. Pounding the Ground Rod into the Soil should be a little easier. Stop pounding the Rod into the Soil when you have about 6"~8" above the normal Soil level left to do. Fill the Whole with Soil and Tamp and the Soil Down {Walk-On-It}. Pound the Rod a little further into the ground and leave about 2"~4" of it above the Soil Level. READ - Make Your Own 'Special' Ground Rod Soil Mixture http://groups.google.com/group/rec.r...b69b219da2de33 http://groups.google.com/group/rec.r...549154294a4d9b hope this helps - iane ~ RHF |
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