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Jim,
The tower is out in the middle of the country and he does not have a 
traditional shack.  The steel valve box is the shack/equipment  room, 
which happens to be made out of steel, that he's trying to use to his 
advantage. 
Trent won't be there to unplug cables like I/we can when a thunderstorm 
approaches.  He's attempting to come up with the best possible lightning 
protection that he can in his situation. 
Rich - N5ZC
On 8/28/2016 2:24 AM, Jim Brown wrote:
 
Trent,
Your first problem is that your box is NOT a shield if cables come 
through openings in the box without their shield being bonded to the 
box at the point where they enter. You must also bond or bypass (with 
feedthrough caps) all other leads coming into the enclosure, like 
power, control lines, audio lines, keying lines, etc. Any one of these 
lines that does not have its shield bonded to the enclosure or come 
through the enclosure via a feedthrough capacitor destroys the shielding. 
As to where to put the Polyphasers -- I would use the "feed through" 
type and bond them to the enclosure. 
The larger question is why you need a Faraday cage in the first place. 
Few stations do. What most stations need is proper BONDING, proper 
grounding, proper power, and proper interconnections between 
equipment. Study http://k9yc.com/GroundingAndAudio.pdf 
73, Jim K9YC
For On Sat,8/27/2016 10:28 PM, trentkd5ia--- via TowerTalk wrote:
 My remote station is approaching completion.  A 70' tower, wireless 
internet, solar power and RemoteRig with a TS480 is all operational.  
Still in progress are the antennas to be mounted, and lightning 
protection.  I have a question about grounding.  The electronics are 
housed in a valve box--a galvanized steel cylinder 5 feet in diameter 
and 4 feet tall, with 3 1/2 feet of that in the ground.  A removable 
steel lid covers it.  All cables are in PVC pipe and enter the 
housing under ground level, and the valve box is 12 feet from the 
base of the tower.
The grounding system will consist of 9 ground rods, 3 connected to 
each leg of the tower and extending out from the tower.  The valve 
box will also be connected to the grounding system. Polyphasers will 
protect against surges. 
My question is, can I install the surge protectors inside the steel 
housing, or should they be mounted outside the valve box? I'm 
thinking that the steel cylinder possibly acts as a Faraday cage, and 
the grounding connection and surge protection should be attached on 
the outside wall of the housing.  Any comments or suggestions, please? 
Thanks!
Trent K5XM   on the windy and lightning prone West Texas plains
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