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Re: [TowerTalk] Shack to service entrance ground

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Shack to service entrance ground
From: Jim Brown <jim@audiosystemsgroup.com>
Reply-to: jim@audiosystemsgroup.com
Date: Fri, 18 Aug 2023 19:51:10 -0700
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
At the risk of stating the obvious run all antenna circuits to enter near
the service entrance and bond there. Continue the run inside the house to
the “shack.”

For many reasons that depend on where everything is in any given home, the shape of the home, and what's around it (for example, concrete) that is NOT the obvious solution, and in many situations it's a poor one.

Here's one important reason. Lightning arrestors for coax work by
1) taking the shield to properly bonded ground at a suitable point, and 2) shorting the center conductor to the shield, protecting the input circuit of the receiver and/or the transmitter/power amp output stage. #2 depends on that short being placed very close to the protected circuitry; if there's a lot of coax between the protector and that circuitry, a differential voltage will be induced on center conductor by current in the shield (from the strike), requiring a second protector at the shack. The strength of the induced voltage is proportional to the shield current and the resistance of the shield at the frequency(ies) of interest, and inversely proportional to the density/uniformity of the shield. A measure of this relationship is the "transfer impedance" of the shield, and is the ratio of the induced voltage to the shield current.

> At a minimum you will almost certainly destroy the RS232/USB interface
> on your rig and the RS232/USB port on the computer.

A VERY common cause of computer interfaces being fried are Pin One Problems in the victim equipment (that is, failure to bond cable shields to the shielding enclosure at the point of entry). This causes any shield current (RFI, or the strike) to wander around circuit common on the circuit until it finds the chassis, creating IR drop along they way. When it's only hum, buzz, or RF, we hear hum or buzz in the audio, or have RF feedback. When it's a strike, stuff fries.

Virtually all consumer products, everything from computers to home entertainment to TV sets, AND virtually all ham gear, are built with Pin One Problems. That's why ferrite common mode chokes and proper bonding inside the shack work to kill RFI!

73, Jim K9YC

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