I though I mentioned that. What "EQUIPMENT" are you referring too?
Just agreeing with you.
It is very effective for protecting your eqipment.
What are you talking about?!
I though I mentioned that. What "EQUIPMENT" are you referring too?
I agree in part with what Doc says. I know that lightning is an incredibly power force capable of 10's of thousands of amps and millions of volts. No way any home grounding system is going to dictate where that charge is going to go.
Anyone with any common sense is going to disconnect their coax and toss is out the window when a storm approaches. Better yet, disconnect your equipment, including power supplies, completely from a/c. I even go as far as unplugging modems, tv's, DVD players and everything else I don't want fried if there is a close strike.
Antenna grounding and lightning is ALWAYS a hot topic on every radio forum I belong to. Lightning itself is a very interesting subject.
At my current location..
I never had my antennas Grounded..
I also Never was hit by lightning..
If i could have... i would have set up an extensive Grounding system
UnFortunately though my location is all deep concrete and i didnt want to break through sidewalks/driveways in order to set a ground rod in the ground..
I suppose i could have set to the cable box that was likely grounded (somewhere....maybe..lol)
So i always un plugged and stuck the coax out the window for any/all storms..
The reason i Most likely never was struck by lightning though was most likely due to a high cel tower 1/8 mile away in one direction..
A much higher building an 1/8 mile in another direction and in a slightly different direction very tall propane tanks..
I have seen the propane tanks struck by lightning a few times.
This Spring...when i get whatever antenna to replace those fallen due to Hurricane Sandy...I will look into proper grounding.
I would add..
To those adding grounding and have more then one antenna.
One should be sure all the antennas grounded have the same length
grounding wire to the common ground point.
Thank You Ratso ... exactly.
Any comparison between a multi-hundred foot high commercial broadcast setup and very low home CB setup is absurd.
My antenna is 160' to the feed point so where does that leave me?
My antenna is 160' to the feed point so where does that leave me?
No one seems to bring up the issue of bonding between ground systems. A typical radio station has at least two ground systems, one at the antenna and other other at the AC entrance. These must be properly bonded to shunt ground current between them instead of through equipment. In my experience, at least 75% of equipment failures are related to improper bonding. Towers can be grounded properly, building AC grounded properly, but unless the two are bonded together the equipment acts as a jumper and will suffer damage.
These four files are very good and explain the how and why of station grounding and bonding. The basic principals remain the same regardless of whether it is ham radio, paging systems, AM / FM broadcasting, chicken band, etc.
Polyphaser - Lightning Protection & Grounding Solutions for Communications Sites. (4467kB) http://members.rennlist.org/warren/LightningProtectionAndGrounding.pdf
Broadcast Electronics - Installation Methods for Protecting Solid State Broadcast Transmitters Against Damage from Lightning and AC Power Surges (204kB) http://members.rennlist.org/warren/ground.pdf
Nautel - Recommendations for Transmitter Site Preparation (5827kB) http://members.rennlist.org/warren/TransmitterSitePreparation.pdf
Nautel - Lightning Protection for Radio Transmitter Stations (1530kB) http://members.rennlist.org/warren/LightningProtection.pdf
(FWIW, a large portion of the remaining failures are due to improper ventilation and cooling.)
No one seems to bring up the issue of bonding between ground systems. A typical radio station has at least two ground systems, one at the antenna and other other at the AC entrance. These must be properly bonded to shunt ground current between them instead of through equipment. In my experience, at least 75% of equipment failures are related to improper bonding. Towers can be grounded properly, building AC grounded properly, but unless the two are bonded together the equipment acts as a jumper and will suffer damage.
These four files are very good and explain the how and why of station grounding and bonding. The basic principals remain the same regardless of whether it is ham radio, paging systems, AM / FM broadcasting, chicken band, etc.
Polyphaser - Lightning Protection & Grounding Solutions for Communications Sites. (4467kB) http://members.rennlist.org/warren/LightningProtectionAndGrounding.pdf
Broadcast Electronics - Installation Methods for Protecting Solid State Broadcast Transmitters Against Damage from Lightning and AC Power Surges (204kB) http://members.rennlist.org/warren/ground.pdf
Nautel - Recommendations for Transmitter Site Preparation (5827kB) http://members.rennlist.org/warren/TransmitterSitePreparation.pdf
Nautel - Lightning Protection for Radio Transmitter Stations (1530kB) http://members.rennlist.org/warren/LightningProtection.pdf
(FWIW, a large portion of the remaining failures are due to improper ventilation and cooling.)
Thank You Captain Kilowatt! I've been off the radio since the early 70's and used one on several trips up and down I95 moving to N. C. from Pa. after my retirement and I guess I just caught the bug again... Anyway thanks for the help; hopefully I will get it grounded properly and not smoke the house or the equipment!You know, you should really learn something about proper grounding techniques and stop thinking that just because you have never been hit that your way of doing it is better. You have been lucky. No more and no less. You and a couple others here seem to think that grounding an antenna makes it a lightning rod and more susceptible to lightning strikes and that not having a ground is better. If that was truly the case commercial installations would not spend thousands of dollars on grounding. That fact that they do and take several strikes a year and yet somehow manage to remain on the air proves they are doing it right. If this sounds like I am pissed a bit it is because I am. Having been in radio for 35 years and commercial broadcasting for 22 years I cannot stand by while someone tells someone else not to install a ground wire because it makes their antenna a lightning rod and will cause it to be hit more often. Like it or not but I am fed up with it. The proof is out there. All you have to do is get educated. :bdh:
Pay no attention to Wire Weasel. He has his own way of thinking and although sometimes he can be right, this time he is dead wrong.
Minimum code for a ground wire is 6 gauge. Heavier is better. Minimum for a ground rod is an 8 foot rod driven as deep as you can as close as you can to the antenna. All ground cables should be as short and as direct as possible with no sharp bends and absolutely no loops. The best place to connect the ground wire is right where the antenna mounts to the mast. This ensures a good connection to the antenna itself. Alternately you can just ground the bottom of the mast IF and ONLY IF the antenna mount has a good clean and solid connection to the mast at the top.Ideally you should bond the ground rod wire to the house electrical entrance panel as well but for simplicity you can disconnect the coax cable from the radio gear whenever a storm is coming. This leaves the ground wire as the preferred path for lightning to follow. If the cable was still connected to the radio the lightning can still follow it to the gear even with the ground rod in place. Proper lightning grounding is part science and part an art form but it is not complicated nor is it something that can simply be overlooked. As for not making your antenna system a lightning rod that will attract lightning as Wire Weasel would have you think, tell tht to a guy outside town here. Several years ago a CB'er had his Antron 99 mounted on the eve of his house. No ground rod or wire. the cable came in through the attic and ran behind his cabinets in the kitchen where his radio was located. Lightning hit the antenna blowing it to splinters. it followed the cables down to the kitchen blowing the cabinets off the wall and setting the house on fire. It cause over $30,000 damage to the house. Oh yeah, he had disconnected the coax from the radio thinking that since it was not touching anything metallic it would be safe. Common sense says that if lightning can jump a couple miles of air then a mere fraction of an inch of vinyl insulation on a piece of coax cable means nothing.