One only has to spend 15 minutes in the Motorola R56 standard for lightning and
surge protection grounding to understand the shortcomings of the NEC in
properly protecting radio systems installations from those risks. The R56 is
the industry standard for such installations and is an excellent model for how
to properly protect an amateur radio station installation from those risks.
The NEC has electrical safety grounding covered and the v- grounding issue
appears philosophical and won't be settled here.
I will say that many DC powered transceivers have the V- tied to chassis ground
and if you follow the manufacturers instructions (and accepted practice) and
tie the transceiver ground lug to an outside lightning/surge protection
grounding system...and that grounding system is bonded to the building
electrical safety ground as required by the NEC, the V- is effectively tied to
the "green wire" at the electrical panel.
Just checked two Omni VI's and my Orion II and two Astron switchers...all have
V- tied to chassis ground.
I have no opinion at this point as to whether that is proper or not but I don't
see many modifying their gear to change that...
I'm done...
Cecil
K5DL
Sent from my iPad
On Sep 5, 2012, at 11:26 PM, Jim Brown <k9yc@audiosystemsgroup.com> wrote:
> On 9/5/2012 8:08 PM, Cecil wrote:
>> I seem to remember this to be a touchy subject. Sorry to have fueled it in
>> any way.
>
> I seriously doubt there is any daylight between Bob and myself (or Wes) on
> proper grounding. Our disagreement is about bonding of V-.
>
> 73, Jim K9YC
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