[bars] Ground post
KC1SOZ
kc1soz at bd5.com
Sun Apr 30 17:22:20 EDT 2023
Folks, I just want to install a ground, not engage in a federal project
requiring me to read a whole book on the subject. The manufacturer does not
require counterpoises or anything like that. Just a mast, the antenna,
mounting hardware for the u-bolts, the grounding post and strap, and of
course the feedline. Even the radials are optional when ground mounting.
http://www.radiomanual.info/schemi/ACC_antenna/Hy-gain_AV-14AVQ_user.pdf
Thanks for the input. I got this.
On Sun, Apr 30, 2023 at 4:38 PM matthew sapienza via bars <bars at w1hh.org>
wrote:
> I have the same book I definitely helped me with grounding my shack and
> radio/ amplifier/ tuner and hf mobile radios and antennas
>
>
> Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone
> <https://overview.mail.yahoo.com/?.src=iOS>
>
> On Sunday, April 30, 2023, 16:34, Dan Trainor <dptrainor at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> [image:
> 41+zyyI-5IL._SR600,315_PIWhiteStrip,BottomLeft,0,35_PIStarRatingFOURANDHALF,BottomLeft,360,-6_SR600,315_ZA76,445,290,400,400,AmazonEmberBold,12,4,0,0,5_SCLZZZZZZZ_FMpng_BG255,255,255.jpg]
>
> Grounding and Bonding for the Radio Amateur 2nd Edition – Good Practices
> for Electrical Safety, Lightning Protection, and RF Management
> <https://www.amazon.com/Grounding-Bonding-Radio-Amateur-ARRL-dp-1625951493/dp/1625951493/ref=dp_ob_title_bk>
> amazon.com
> <https://www.amazon.com/Grounding-Bonding-Radio-Amateur-ARRL-dp-1625951493/dp/1625951493/ref=dp_ob_title_bk>
>
> <https://www.amazon.com/Grounding-Bonding-Radio-Amateur-ARRL-dp-1625951493/dp/1625951493/ref=dp_ob_title_bk>
>
>
> "Proper Station Grounding is Important!
>
> The second edition of Grounding and Bonding for the Radio Amateur introduces
> you to the current standards for lightning protection and communication
> systems. You’ll learn effective grounding and bonding techniques for home
> stations (including condos and apartments), portable and mobile stations,
> towers, and outdoor antennas.
>
> Build your ham radio station using these effective grounding and bonding
> techniques:
>
> AC safety: Protect against shock hazards from ac-powered equipment by
> providing a safe path for current when a fault in wiring or insulation
> occurs.
>
>
> Lightning protection: Keep all equipment at the same voltage during
> transients from lightning, and dissipate the lightning’s charge in the
> Earth, away from equipment.
>
>
> RF management: Prevent unwanted RF currents and voltages (also known as
> RF interference or RFI) from disrupting the normal functions of equipment.”
>
>
> 73 de WA1QZX
>
>
>
> On Apr 30, 2023, at 4:28 PM, Geoffrey Feldman <geoffreyf at comcast.net>
> wrote:
>
> There is no black and white answer. Check antenna performance. Read up
> on Lightning protection. What I wrote to you is considerably condensed
> from the ARRL book on this subject.
>
> It’s better to do the extra work and get it right. It’s very good to
> recognize that not all grounds are the same thing – but you want to think
> that way? You might get away with it or – you might ruin your rig or burn
> down your house in a Lightning strike. The choice is still yours.
>
> DO NOT use the ground for the house electrical system or the cable TV
> system ALWAYS use your own ground. It’s not OK to use an existing ground
> for another system – never OK for that.
>
> You still didn’t tell us the wavelength of your antenna. That matters a
> lot.
>
> Geoff W1GCF
>
> *From:* KC1SOZ [mailto:kc1soz at bd5.com]
> *Sent:* Sunday, April 30, 2023 4:15 PM
> *To:* Geoffrey Feldman
> *Cc:* w1hh
> *Subject:* Re: [bars] Ground post
>
> So, 1) is a bad idea, 2) is ok? As I said, the mast would be a metal post
> buried 8 ft into the ground.
>
> The antenna in question is one of the Hy-Gain AV-14AVQ's that I bought
> from Niece (and maybe a second one in a phased array later on.)
>
> On Sun, Apr 30, 2023 at 4:04 PM Geoffrey Feldman <geoffreyf at comcast.net>
> wrote:
>
> “Ground” has different meanings. The short answer to your question is: No.
>
> Explanation: In this particular case, what you propose is ill advised.
> The electrical system ground post is for the electrical system. RF or
> Lightning that is not absorbed by that post would then go into the
> residence. Similarly surges from the power distribution system could go to
> your equipment. Yes, people do this and get away with it but that doesn’t
> mean it’s a good idea or that it’s the same idea at different locales.
>
> If you are sure it’s buried 8’ STRAIGHT DOWN into the ground then it’s
> probably OK for lightning strike management. (However there should be
> precautions for where the feedline goes into your home but that’s another
> story.) Where Lightning is concerned there is no perfect solutions just to
> pray that yours is good enough.
>
> If you are asking about an effective counterpoise then it may not be
> satisfactory. The answer depends on soil conditions where you are but
> generally wires laid along the ground or just beneath the turf will provide
> better antenna performance (you didn’t mention the wavelength, so for
> shorter wave lengths there may be easier but adequate solutions) Measure
> performance and if in doubt – add more horizontal wires along the ground.
>
>
> In both cases, what you suggest may not prevent common mode currents
> returning through the outer conductor of the Coax. This is bad but can be
> corrected with a choke near the entry point to the house. If the E-field
> of your antenna doesn’t find a suitable place to complete its circuit
> (counterpoise or opposite side in a dipole) then it will find other paths.
> Antenna performance will suffer, impedance will be off etc.
>
> Back to the word “Ground” – the word is used in other ways such as
> “equipment ground, a no load safety return for electrical failure (the
> third prong of a plug). It can mean a comment point that stated voltages
> in a circuit are measured from. In other radio systems, it can mean a
> suitable return path for the e-field such as the metal body of a car, a
> radar dish etc. If you were to sink 8’ ground rods 10 feet apart or so
> you would likely see voltage between them, pointing out that ground is
> never absolute, it’s always local.
>
> By the way, do not use a ground established for the buildings Cable TV
> service. That can make you super unpopular.
>
> Putting in a new ground can be a lot of fun. When in doubt – do that.
> Get the standard ground stake sold at Lowes or Home Depot. Get up on a
> step ladder to start it in. A solid carpenters hammer is enough. It may
> seem stuck, keep banging and hopefully you will break what it’s stuck on.
> (Dig safe is a good thing too)
>
> That should do it
> Geoff W1GCF
>
>
> *From:* bars [mailto:bars-bounces at w1hh.org] *On Behalf Of *KC1SOZ
> *Sent:* Sunday, April 30, 2023 3:38 PM
> *To:* w1hh
> *Subject:* [bars] Ground post
>
> When putting up a ground-mounted vertical antenna...
>
> 1) Is it OK to attach the ground strap from one of the u-bolts to the
> residential grounding post already buried in the ground?
>
> 2) Is a grounding strap strictly necessary if the mast to which the
> antenna is attached with the u-bolts is itself a metal post buried almost 8
> feet into the ground?
>
> 73,
> KC1SOZ
> Juan
>
> _______________________________________________
> bars mailing list
> bars at w1hh.org
> http://mail.w1hh.org/mailman/listinfo/bars_w1hh.org
> _______________________________________________
> bars mailing list
> bars at w1hh.org
> http://mail.w1hh.org/mailman/listinfo/bars_w1hh.org
>
> _______________________________________________
> bars mailing list
> bars at w1hh.org
> http://mail.w1hh.org/mailman/listinfo/bars_w1hh.org
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mail.w1hh.org/pipermail/bars_w1hh.org/attachments/20230430/fb3d7d3d/attachment.htm>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: 41+zyyI-5IL._SR600,315_PIWhiteStrip,BottomLeft,0,35_PIStarRatingFOURANDHALF,BottomLeft,360,-6_SR600,315_ZA76,445,290,400,400,AmazonEmberBold,12,4,0,0,5_SCLZZZZZZZ_FMpng_BG255,255,255.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 84945 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://mail.w1hh.org/pipermail/bars_w1hh.org/attachments/20230430/fb3d7d3d/attachment.jpg>
More information about the bars
mailing list