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Mark Keith wrote:
I guess it would be ok, if you installed a ground window. But here, I see no point to separate the grounds. If I had noise on a power line ground to the house, I would still probably receive it anyway using any other ground, being the ground conductivity is pretty good here. I don't ground my radios to the power line ground normally, so thats something I don't have to worry about. Actually, I normally don't ground my radio at all. It's grounded through the antenna ground. Thats the only one I use. When using the dipoles, I'm not grounded at all. Nada... I guess this method is ok as long as all precautions are taken. "ground window" But still, overall, I don't like unbonded grounds. And well you shouldn't. They're against code. While the article in the following link is specifically about lightning safety, it puts to rest a number of myths about grounding, particularly the dangerous notion that grounding to a single point causes "ground loops."** The author is a long-time broadcast engineer and ham who has designed and operated grounding systems that allow the equipment to survive direct lightning strikes to the antennas.** http://jplarc.ampr.org/calling/1996/...html#grounding -- John Miller Email address: domain, n4vu.com; username, jsm We gotta get out of this place, If it's the last thing we ever do. -The Animals |
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