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Re: [TowerTalk] Grounding of cables to tower? (N3AE)

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Grounding of cables to tower? (N3AE)
From: jimlux <jimlux@earthlink.net>
Date: Thu, 19 Oct 2017 12:26:04 -0700
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
On 10/19/17 11:20 AM, Jim Brown wrote:
On 10/19/2017 6:49 AM, jimlux wrote:
In your case, one could put a 1:1 transformer at the remote building, primary side fed from the house, secondary side feeding your subpanel, where neutral and ground would be connected(because it's an entirely separate system).
There would be no "ground path" from house to garage.
The fly in this ointment, I believe, is that the transformer must be 
bonded to the ground from the panel that feeds it, so grounds between 
the two buildings are still tied together. We ran into this issue with 
audio and video systems in large buildings, where isolation transformers 
with Faraday shields were used to minimize the transfer of noise from 
building power to the audio and/or video systems, and misguidedly 
expected to separate equipment ground for these systems from building 
ground.
within a building, sure..

Under current NEC, equipment ground must be carried between buildings. 
Prior to about ten years ago, NEC permitted a feed between buildings 
without the equipment ground, with a panel in the second building, 
neutral bonded to equipment ground, and ground rods for the second 
building.  Without the transformer but with ground carried between 
buildings, a panelboard and earth ground are still required in the 
second building but neutral and ground MUST NOT be bonded in that panel.
Interesting.. I'll have to go look up the history of that change. There 
must have been some problem.
There have been all sorts of issues with grounding/bonding - large 
motors with variable speed drives that have nuisance trips because of 
apparent ground fault, for instance.



A 15 kVA "dry transformer" is about $500

Of course, if you run your coax, bonded to the tower, bonded to the garage grounding system, back to the shack in your house, you've now created a path from "grounding system in the garage" to "grounding system in house", but that's the only path...
This issue, but with coax for CATV between buildings, is probably what 
drove the change to NEC noted above.
73, Jim K9YC

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