I am not certain how those numbers apply to conduction of current, but it
seems obvious they differ from what is used by industry. I have never seen
copper plated PL259's. Same for pins used in commercial plugs/sockets.
-----Original Message-----
From: TowerTalk [mailto:towertalk-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Roger
(K8RI) on TT
Sent: Wednesday, October 09, 2013 5:50 PM
To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Fwd: Connecting Tower to Ground Rod
On 10/9/2013 5:59 PM, Keith Dutson wrote:
> The goal is to conduct as many electrons as possible, flowing from a
> lightning strike, away from the tower. IOW, spread them to a location
> that can accept them into the earth. This lowers the possibility that
> they will go somewhere else, such as down a coax cable to the shack.
> So, it stands to reason that one would want to use the most conductive
material possible.
> Amoung conductors, gold is best, followed by silver.
Ahhh...Gold is not the best conductor compared to Silver
*Gold*: 2.24: Copper: 1.724: *Silver*: 1.59:
So both copper and silver are better conductors than gold with silver being
almost twice as good as gold. Gold OTOH is tarnish resistant and is almost
like a lubricant on contacts
Silver easily corrodes and copper is not far behind.
73
Roger (K8RI)
<snip>
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