I am told that this can actually contribute to RFI and can lead
to other problems from the grid, cable, and phone services
into your home.
The copper wire is sometimes stolen (in which case you'd see
long piece missing - generally when metal prices are high), it
could be hit by a large roadside mower (copper is soft), it
could
have been damaged by a lightning strike, it may not have been
properly installed in the first place - using a defective
crimp which
later failed, it could have been bumped by a vehicle backing up.
No big thing, unless it's your pole or you are trying to
chase RFI
and it is a variable you need to check-off.
>> Have you noticed that many of these wires are severed?
>
> Back when I was a kid and used to get around by foot or bike, I used to pay
> a bit of attention to the utility poles (often without understanding
> everything about them).
>
> I frequently saw the ground wires, and still do. Mostly on the poles with
> transformers.
>
> I never saw a severed ground wire.
>
> Who would cut them, anyway? (Other than jerks doing it just for fun,
> probably on off-weeks when they aren't smashing mailboxes.)
>
> I don't see much connection to RFI. If there is something on the line
> causing RFI, I'd think it would happen whether or not the ground wire is
> intact, though it might affect its magnitude.
>
> Andy
--
Thanks! & 73, doc, KD4E
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