Towertalk
[Top] [All Lists]

[TowerTalk] Grounding

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: [TowerTalk] Grounding
From: Phil Camera <kb9cry@comcast.net>
Date: Wed, 04 Oct 2006 21:23:46 -0500
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
Hi all,

I've been reading a few online articles pertaining to single-point 
ground systems and I need to clarify a few things. I've decided to 
indeed go with a single-point panel and a perimeter ground wire


Yes, this is the way to go.  Also to this SPG you tie your station 
equipment ground and run around the perimeter of the house to your electrical 
service entrance ground.


1): I've driven 18 ground rods in (most went all the way, but 5 or 6 
had about 2 or 3 feet still sticking out of the ground (tree roots or 
boulders under the topsoil, I suspect here). 

Just cut them off just below ground level and have at it.


I'm planning to tie all 
of this together with #4 solid. 

CadWelding the connections is best and maintenance free.

I understand that the "sphere of 
influence" is typically double the ground rod length, but now there 
are sections that are 16 feet apart with only 5 or 6 feet of rod in 
the ground. Is this going to be a problem, do you think? 



Theoretically you should drive in other shorter rods to "fill in" the voids.  
I'd say do it.


Also, do the 
ends of the buried lightning-protection radials need to be bonded to 
a ground rod or is it OK to go from a 16'-intermediate point ground 
rod to a "free end."


Ground rod at the end of the radial.


2: I've had a few people tell me that the radials needed for RF 
counterpoise purposes need not be bonded to the lightning protection 
ground, but I ran into one online presentation that deemed it 
mandatory. What is the recommended practice here?


One can't be over-grounded and tieing all together will not hurt.


3: UPSs with MOVs. I'm reading that MOV surge suppressors are NOT a 
good thing in terms of lightning protection. On the other hand, UPSs 
are needed for all the PCs in the house. How can I get the UPS 
protection I need and still have solid lightning protection?


The MOVs in commercial surge suppressors are prone to failure due to energy 
surges.  
You need to purchase the "real" thing from Polyphaser or ICE for your lightning 
arresting.

4): (related to the above): Where are TVSS (normal-mode) suppressors 
sold? 

Companies listed aboe.

Since there will be about 250' of #4 wire between my SPGP and 
the house's service ground, do I need to get an expensive "whole 
house" device as well as TVSS on the SPGP in the shack? 

That's one way.  Personally I have suppressors by ICE on my power lines 
just at the shack and not the whole house.


I'm not in a 
heavily-at-risk part of the country (Northern NJ) but we do get some 
good storms every year--and I've got a 70' crank-up which *usually* 
goes down to about 40' or so when there's word of severe weather on the way.

You're in a risky area, don't deny the fact.  You need to install a proper 
grounding system.
Go to the Polyphaser and ICE websites and thoroughly read all their technical 
articles.
All the info is there and if properly installed with no minor details missed, 
you never
have to disconnect.  It can be done.

Phil




-- 

Phil Camera, KB9CRY
Lockport, Illinois
http://nidxa.org/memberWWW/kb9cry_home.htm


_______________________________________________



_______________________________________________
TowerTalk mailing list
TowerTalk@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/towertalk

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
  • [TowerTalk] Grounding, Phil Camera <=