Not to make too fine a point of it, but... At least when I learned it it was
FORTRAN, but according to Wikipedia, it's now officially Fortran. Here's the
excerpt: "Fortran (previously FORTRAN, derived from Formula Translating System)
..."
I originally learned a dialect called WATFIV, which really stood for Waterloo
FORTRAN IV, on a Xerox Sigma Six computer. Now, of course, it's various
versions of parallel Fortran that is supported on our XEON64 OCT core LINUX
supercomputing cluster here.
I doubt that I'll need that much computing power for this problem, but just in
case...
Kim N5OP
On Friday, October 24, 2014 8:53 AM, Patrick Greenlee
<patrick_g@windstream.net> wrote:
That is ForTran, not FORTRAN. Formula Translator ;) ;)
Patrick NJ5G
-----Original Message-----
From: Kimberly Elmore
Sent: Friday, October 24, 2014 8:26 AM
To: Jim Lux ; towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Fwd: Cad welding vs clamps
I'll take FORTRAN.
Kim N5OP
On Friday, October 24, 2014 8:14 AM, Jim Lux <jimlux@earthlink.net> wrote:
On 10/24/14, 3:56 AM, john@kk9a.com wrote:
> That depends on your soil conditions. Some of us have shale, rock and/or
> hard clay making it impossible to push in a full 8' ground rod.
>
>
> From: Hans Hammarquist via TowerTalk <towertalk@contesting.com>
>
> What would work if you bury it deep enough. I would believe 8 feet of
> strap
> buried 4 feet down should be equal to an 8 foot rod pushed down 8 feet.
>
>
> I do think it is less work to push the rod down than to dig a trench for
> the
> strap.
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Drax Felton <draxfelton@gmail.com>
>
>
> What if one were not to use a ground rod and just bury the strap?
>
>
The code allows you to drive the rod at an angle.
>From an electrical standpoint, you don't need to bury the strap 8 feet
down.
IEEE 142-1999 Table 13 has formulas for all kinds of configurations of
rods, wires, straps and the like. there's a new version from 2007 out.
If I get ambitious, I'll put some of the equations online, but they're
long series expansions, so a bit tedious.
Anybody have a preference.. as matlab/octave/fortran/c equations or as
Excel Spreadsheet formulas?
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