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"m II" wrote
Jack Painter wrote: "m II" wrote CaveDweller wrote: Of course, I'm interested in the lowest noise possible, but my main concern is protecting my new baby. This is a nice, simple solution. I had to go back in time to find it for you. http://www.gutenberg.net/cdproject/c...ah/fig006c.png mike NO! That drawing, taken on it's own, will allow a nearby strike to blow your radio into pieces so fine you can clean up with a duster. Why? Becasue the electric power ground (house entrance), and cold water ground (a different entrance than AC service 99% of the time), and that phony knife-switch "protector" ground rod, are all at different locations and will have *enormous* electrical potential between them . I disagree. A big knife switch will have a few INCHES of air gap between the common and the radio feed. At roughly 20K volts per inch needed to jump the gap to the disconnected radio, any few volt difference between grounding potentials is immaterial. Check the diagram. The radio is **never** connected to the ground rod. It's only meant to discharge antenna static to ground Also, this switch is an ISOLATING switch and not meant in any case to supplant a proper lightning protection set up. A metal cold water line coming into the house is the PREFERRED code ground for the house (system) wiring. An artificial electrode like a ground rod/plate may be used if plastic line is coming in for the water, but NOT if metal water line is available. To make you even more paranoid, the electrical code, at least here, says the ground rod/pipe may NOT have a resistance greater than TEN ohms between it and ground. Up to ten ohms is code acceptable. That means on a nominal 120 volt residential circuit, a fault current of up to TWELVE amps may be flowing at all times and not even trip the breaker. mike Hi Mike, You are very confused about this, and I will try to correct your misunderstandings. 1. The dwg at http://www.gutenberg.net/cdproject/c...ah/fig006c.png allows a path for lightning to the radio at all times, whether the radio is connected to AC at the time or not. I warned readers that such simple fixes were dangerous and improper, specifically because such dwgs do not show or explain that there is a connection via the knife-switch ground, AC ground and that cold water ground that could have disasterous effects in the event of a nearby strike. It's also clear that you don't understand how those paths exist, but presumably you are in this discussion to learn something. 2. Cold water line is not authorized as AC service entrance ground, and a second ground may never be made to it under any circumstances without bonding of all systems. Older homes that used cold water ground remain legal unless modified or upgraded to comply with current code. But.... When a homeowner connects an external antenna to a radio inside the home, many electrical principals, code requirements and lightning protection issues come into play that were not a concern beforehand. When you are dealing with 100Mv potential from cloud to ground, it is totally immaterial what you think you know about 20Kv potentials. Now, DC resistance of a system is almost meaningless, and the inductive effects prevail. Separation of unbonded systems should be a minumum of 3 feet, not fractions of an inch as would suffice for 120/240v fault protection. Most lighning protection designs account for the most probable condition of indirect nearby strikes, in which the ground will raise from 0v to several hundred thousand volts. Every part of a home and station's connection to ground will be connected to part of this potential, and the differential voltages across unbonded systems are absolutely explosive in such cases. You were not exposed to such risk before you strung up or erected antennas in the air and made grounding connections at different places such as your RF radio ground, outside antenna ground, coax shield at the radio case, and AC ground from the radio case to your home wiring. When you add a cold water ground to the mix you increase the potential for damage even more. This is why electrical bonding of all systems is so critical, and that bonding must be of extremely low impedance (not just DC resistance!) to maintain the lowest possible potential between all parts of the grounding system. You did make one comment that was accurate, and that was the importance of disconnecting the system to protect it. For the most basic kinds of hobby listening, tossing the antenna feedline out the window and unplugging the radio long before a thunderstorm arrives will be suffcient. But making any kind of ground connection (be it cold water, under-house, external RF ground, etc) let the user beware! They must disconnect all connections that are not a permanent, bonded connections designed to withstand the extremely high potentials from nearby lightning strikes. The earth is the final destination of all lightning, and all lightning rasies earth-ground potential to voltages no home wiring was designed or is capable of handling. Bonding is what prevents our systems from having to carry current that would violently and completely destroy it. Current only flows when differences of potential (voltage) occur. Is this making things a little clearer? Best regards, Jack |
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