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Re: [TowerTalk] Grounding

To: <john@kk9a.com>, <towertalk@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Grounding
From: <wc1m73@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 4 Sep 2019 17:42:32 -0400
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
I agree that simply disconnecting the coax isn't enough, and that a quality 
whole house surge protector is a good idea. It certainly can't hurt. But I 
highly recommend designing the station so that *all* wires between the 
tower(s)/antenna(s) and the building can be easily disconnected, with the 
possible exception of the ground cables (see discussion below.) Belt and 
suspenders are worth every penny.

12 years ago I had a lightning surge that caused over $10K in damage to $30K 
worth of equipment (had I not done all of the troubleshooting and repair 
myself, the bill would have been much higher.) Luckily, my home insurance 
covered it. I've posted extensively on TT about that event, so I won't repeat 
all of the gory details here, but wanted to point out that the strike did not 
hit the tower. It hit a tree several hundred feet from the tower, and the 
damage was caused by an induced surge. Damage on the tower was pretty minimal 
-- just the destruction of four relay diodes in the stack match and complete 
vaporization of a wide ground trace on its PCB (the only place where I found 
any scorch marks or physical evidence of the surge.)  Other than that, none of  
the hardline, coax, cables or antenna switch relays were damaged. FWIW, the 
shields of all the hardline and coax were bonded to the tower at the top and 
bottom, and the relays were configured to be open rather than shorted when not 
 selected. None of the 24 SteppIR motors and none of the four rotors on the 
tower were damaged. The rest of the damage was indoors, as described below.

The tower that took the surge has a Ufer ground with three 50' radials of 1/0 
buried stranded cable, each Cadwelded to four 8' ground rods spaced 16' apart 
(12 rods total). As it's 225' from the shack, there's no ground cable running 
between the tower and the SPG at the shack entrance (Polyphaser says that past 
75' the grounds don't "see" each other.) That said, there are two runs of 
1-5/8" heliax between the tower ground and shack SPG, and the huge corrugated 
copper shields probably have much lower inductance than a 1/0 ground wire. So 
if the grounds can see each other past 75', I think they're pretty-well bonded 
together. I have bulkhead Polyphaser coaxial surge suppressors for every RF 
cable mounted through the bottoms of metal utility cabinets at both ends (tower 
and SPG), as well as panel-mounted surge suppressors in the utility boxes with 
two MOVs and a fuse on both ends of each control wire. All shields and ground 
wires are grounded at both ends. The tower and SPG ground syste
 ms are bonded to the metal cabinets via 1/0 stranded wire. The SPG is also 
bonded to all the other ground systems that enter the house -- telco, cable, 
satellite, electric. Unfortunately, they external drops for those grounds are 
on the other side of the house, so I had to run the bonding cable from the 
utility cabinets directly a cross the basement ceiling to the utility entry 
panel. It wasn't clear to me that installing a couple hundred feet of ground 
wire around the house with 15-20 ground rods Cadwelded to it was a better way 
to bond the grounds. Open to discussion on that.

My theory on how the destruction occurred is that the surge was handled by the 
coax surge protectors, and most of the MOVs, but the MOVs connected to my three 
SteppIR controllers were of too high a value to protect the delicate ICs. They 
were more suitable for protecting old-style rotor controllers, which didn't 
have any delicate ICs. As it was, the motor control FETs in my three Green 
Heron controllers were destroyed, but I believe the GH circuit design is such 
that the FETs acted as fuses to protect the CPUs and other electronics. Not so 
the SteppIR controllers. Their delicate SMD driver chips were fried, and the 
surge made it past them to the RS-232 transceiver interface. From there it got 
to the computer, destroyed the motherboard, CPU and multiport RS-232 card, and 
then propagated to every device connected to that card, including a Ten-Tec 
Orion (totaled), an Alpha 87A (RS232 IC fried and CPU partially damaged) an 
Acom 2000A (RS232 IC and CPU fried), a MicroHam StackMaX controll
 er (totaled), a W5XD keyer (RS232 IC and CPU). The StackMax could have been 
damaged by the voltage threshold of the MOVs in the suppressors being rated too 
high. I also lost the RS-232 level converter between an FT-1000D and the 
computer, but there was no damage to the radio. Evidently, the level converter 
saved the radio. 

I also had damage to a very expensive high-end CD player, a C/Ku-band satellite 
dish LNB, a C/Ku-band 4DTV satellite receiver, a C/Ku-band satellite TV DVB PCI 
card in the computer, a Dish satellite receiver, a garage door opener, a phone 
line, a digital scale (totaled via RS232 from the computer), and a ROKU media 
processor. I believe the damage to those devices came via the C/Ku-band 
satellite TV DVB PCI card in the aforementioned computer, which was on the same 
PCI bus as the RS-232 card. It's possible the surge was picked up by one or 
both satellite dishes, damaging the entertainment system devices and 
propagating to the computer via the DVB card, and to all the station devices, 
but given the damage and the destruction of the SteppIR and GH motor drivers, I 
think it was the other way around (or maybe both.) No power supplies were 
damaged, and no devices outside the shack and entertainment center were 
damaged, except the garage door opener and telco line. I've lost several garage 
 door openers after lightning storms, and have read that they're quite 
susceptible to lightning (I suspect the long wires to the manual switches acts 
like an antennas.) The damage to the telco line was outside the house, so 
evidently it picked up the surge there and the indoor suppressors did their job.

After repairing all the damage, I designed and installed a large patch panel so 
I could quickly disconnect the many cables between the tower and shack. It 
wasn't feasible to locate the panel outside, which would have been preferable, 
so I installed it in a basement closet. All the cables passing through the 
utility cabinets that are connected to the SPG enter the house just above the 
sill, easily routed down to the panel. The station side cables run from the 
patch panel up through the basement ceiling into the shack. There are about 20 
or so cables on the patch panel, most of them multi-wire. It takes about five 
minutes to disconnect all of them. I also installed electrical disconnect 
panels so I can quickly cut off the shack circuits from the house AC. My two 
amps and a couple of power supplies, routers, etc. are also located in the 
closet, where I can quickly unplug them from the AC as well.

I built a smaller panel on the other side of the wall behind our entertainment 
center so I could disconnect it from the rooftop TV/FM and satellite TV 
antennas, and there's also an AC disconnect box in there.

Normally, I leave all the cables disconnected when the station isn't in use. I 
only disconnect AC and TV cables when we go on vacation or there's a really 
nasty storm in the area.

Note that I replaced the MOVs in the surge suppressors connected to the SteppIR 
and (I think) GH controllers with MOVs that have as low a value as I could get 
without going below the operating voltage of the driver outputs.

This setup has worked well for 12 years, but I hasten to point out that 
although we've had our share of lightning storms since then, our area isn't 
prone to them and we haven't seen anything near as nasty as the one that hit my 
station in 2007. So I'm not resting on my laurels and am always on the lookout 
for anything I can do to reduce the risk of lightning damage.

[BTW, if TT was on groups.IO, as I've pleaded for, I would be able to attach 
photos of my patch panel, surge suppressors, tower, etc. And likely the text of 
my post would have been shorter, one picture being worth the proverbial 1,000 
words!]

Hope this is helpful to someone.

73, Dick WC1M

-----Original Message-----
From: john@kk9a.com <john@kk9a.com> 
Sent: Wednesday, September 4, 2019 11:45 AM
To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Grounding

GL rebuilding Keith.

A tower lightning strike will cause an induced voltage spike in a  
home's electrical system, even if nothing is connected to the tower.   
I have had this occur while building a new tower and the control cables and 
coax were not yet connected or even touching the tower.  
Simply disconnecting the coax which many hams do is ineffective lightning 
protection. There is a lot of valuable protection information on this list. 
Assuming that you have a bunch of ground rods and a SPG, I would suggest a good 
whole house surge protector.

John KK9A

from [Keith Dutson] NM5G

My experience is that lightning can be managed, to a point.  A direct strike to 
your tower can be catastrophic.  I suffered one on May 9.  My daughter lives 
about 600 feet away and witnessed the strike.  She said sparks flew in all 
directions.  My losses are huge.  I am working with the insurance company, and 
expect the total damage to be well in excess of $50K.  There is evidence that 
high voltage appeared on the tower, power lines, phone lines
(fiber) and even on my wi-fi connection from the house to the shack.  Every 
gigabit switch was toasted, and every PC connected was blown.  Another big loss 
was two large screen TVs, both connected to internet via gigabit switches.  
Repairs were successful by replacing the power supplies.

All this, plus my main two stations, both with Yaesu FTDX9000D and Alpha 87A, 
are gone.  Coax was not even connected because I had just reconfigured the 
station and had not completed the coax switching section.  However, units were 
plugged into power, and the Yaesu transceivers were connected to the PCs.

73, Keith NM5G



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