B
BOOTY MONSTER
Guest
why is it that lightning rods help protect a house from a lightning strike but base antennas dont ?
why is it that lightning rods help protect a house from a lightning strike but base antennas dont ?
if the antenna is connected/bonded to the homes electrical system ground rod through the mast and a heavy ground wire isn't the electrical service connected to earth through the base antenna's path to earth ?
"When you have multiple ground points and not a single point ground you can have a voltage develop between the ground points when the electrical pulse travels through the ground (earth). This causes the ground system to develop a strong current flow that takes out electrical gear."
are you saying there should not be any additional ground rods for the antenna ? just the one for the electrical panel/service ? ..... and use heavy copper wire to bond the antenna/mast to that one ground rod ?
the article pro 151 linked to had a cone of protection illustration just as you described
When you have multiple grounding points in "close" proximity the chances of the capacitance rising in the earth is greatly increased.
6 to 8 feet of space between ground points should be sufficient to stop this in most soils.
If you use the same ground point chances are you are safe, I've had mine that way for several years now and seen many lightning storms.
Being in the wrong place at the wrong time is your enemy so what are your chances?
DC grounded antennas work as lightning rods.
Once.
DC grounded antennas work as lightning rods.
Once.