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Re: [TowerTalk] Fwd: Grounding connection to tower legs

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Fwd: Grounding connection to tower legs
From: jimlux <jimlux@earthlink.net>
Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2017 16:18:35 -0700
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
On 10/16/17 3:44 PM, Clay Autery wrote:
Nope... not me...  Not nearly enough contact for my tastes...

I want a TRUE galvanized or stainless clamp that was tailored as closely to the leg diameter as I could get and AT LEAST as wide as the strap I am using...  Like 2" or better wide...  Think wide turbocharger clamps... Then I want either a properly wound intermediate copper shim that is fully tinned on one side and bright copper on the other, OR a properly formed copper strap which is fully tinned on the contact side. Copper strap... as wide as I an afford and get formed to fit the leg, preferably with nice smooth transitions.

Then I want a suitably compatible conductive filler paste to exclude any moisture form minute gaps anywhere in the clamp system.... preferably where the carrier durable enough not to wash out.  (I used to make stuff like this).

https://www.fastenal.com/products/details/0427932

This kind of design, but say 3 times wider....  3 fasteners.... Or simply stack 3 high.

Whatever you can do to reduce resistance/heating/inductance/corrosion at the junction.

73



Just off the cuff, I think this would be overkill for *lightning protection*, which is why you don't see this approach in the usual commercial radio installation handbooks (e.g. R56)

you don't worry so much about low resistance or contact area - if it's reasonably close, the lightning current will arc from one to the other and a high current spark is VERY low impedance.

And with a long strap, if it does arc underneath, you've got somewhere for pressure to build up.

What *is* important is mechanical strength - as Jim K9YC pointed out, when you have high di/dt and high I, the magnetic forces can be very high - this is, I believe, the reason for "no coiled wire in lightning down conductors" -

while a AWG10 wire will easily carry the stroke current without melting, it's not strong enough to hold together if it's in a configuration where it will be torn apart.

I used to shrink quarters by discharging 10kJ or so in a few microseconds through 10 turns of AWG10 wire wrapped around a broomstick. When the current pulse goes through that coil, the EM forces cause the coil to expand to the point where the coil fragments, arcs, and turns into little blobs of molten copper and solid pieces.

The worst case is if you have parallel conductors, close together, carrying a high current. For instance, two conductors, 0.1 feet apart, carrying 20kA, will have a force of several hundred pounds (per foot of length) pushing them together.

in most systems, the current is being carried by parallel conductors that are already close together (e.g. the tower leg and a parallel grounding conductor), so squishing them together isn't a problem... The real problem comes with dynamic effects - it's not a steady push, it's more like getting hit with a hammer, so things vibrate, and since most lightning consists of multiple strokes, you can see how resonance and dynamic effects can really break things up.

On the other hand, you don't need to go overboard. I'm not seeing 1" bolts on this kind of thing - On the vast majority of lightning installations I've seen, it's more like 1/2" or 3/8", and AWG 2 (just over 1/4") up to 2/0 (just under 3/8" diameter)

So those standard ground rod clamps (1/4" bolt tightening against the rod into a saddle) seem to be about right.

A hose clamp - yeah, they're not super strong in tension against the worm screw, and they might loosen with temperature cycling. 15 psi in a 2" diameter rubber hose with a band clamp is going to put 30 pounds tension on the clamp - not too challenging in the radiator hose application.







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