Towertalk
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: [TowerTalk] grounding elevated vertical for lightning?

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] grounding elevated vertical for lightning?
From: Jim Lux <jimlux@earthlink.net>
Date: Fri, 08 Feb 2013 13:37:04 -0800
List-post: <towertalk@contesting.com">mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
On 2/8/13 10:36 AM, Jim Brown wrote:
On 2/8/2013 5:52 AM, K1TTT wrote:
What is the best way to ground this antenna?  Can I put a few ground
rods at
the center base and run them up to the radial junction?

NO! The work of Rudy Severns, N6LF, on the topic of elevated radials
shows that elevated radials should NOT be grounded, because doing so
causes radial currents to be unbalanced, which increases loss.  For the
same reason, a common mode choke must be used on the coax at the feedpoint.

Exactly... this was one of the interesting non-intuitive findings when NEC3 and NEC4 were being validated: antenna performance with radials alone was better than with the ground rod added.


I assume you want to ground for lightning protection? Then a spark gap is your friend. Open circuit for RF, but when lightning strikes, it closes. Hook the spark gap to your ground rods and to your antenna, and you're all set. A 1/10" gap breaks down at 7kV. Needle gap is more like 2kV.




_______________________________________________



_______________________________________________
TowerTalk mailing list
TowerTalk@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/towertalk

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>