The garage apron which is nearly 30 feet wide by 20 feet long
prevents the installation of a ground ring with the shortest route to
the entrance being under the 30 feet of concrete, with the available
route being 110 feet longer.
Saw cutting a six or eight inch wide path through the garage apron,
installing that part of the ground ring and patching the concrete
is neither difficult or expensive relative to the total cost of the
ground ring/antenna system.
73,
... Joe, W4TV
On 2015-06-06 12:33 AM, Roger (K8RI) on TT wrote:
There is a problem with the best approach. I agree with it in
principle, but In over half, ...well over half the installations I've
seen in over 54 years as a ham the best approach is not practical,
either from a logistics, and or cost approach.
My house is typical for almost all homes in this area with the
electrical, phone and cable coming in the front while the antennas come
in from the back.
The garage apron which is nearly 30 feet wide by 20 feet long prevents
the installation of a ground ring with the shortest route to the
entrance being under the 30 feet of concrete, with the available route
being 110 feet longer.
The best antenna entrance is almost opposite the power entrance
I haven't been able to find a way around this.
To make things worse, I operate SO2R with one station in the shop and
one in the house. They are adjacent, but different addresses and
different power feeds from the same transformer. The neighbor across the
road is also on the same transformer. As the antenna system is common
to both stations, that makes the tower system grounds common to both
stations resulting in both panel grounds eventually being tied
together. I've not seen any practical way to avoid this.
73
Roger (K8RI)
On 6/5/2015 2:39 PM, Joe Subich, W4TV wrote:
The standard advice is to complete the ground "ring" around the house
- extending counterclockwise from the 6M entry point to the service
entrance. Then relocate the 4" underground conduit from the main tower
so it enters the shack at the same point as the 6M entry point.
The combined entry point then becomes the common point for all coax
and control line grounding - each line is connected where it crosses
the "ground ring".
The "ground ring" is about the only safe way to provide a common entry
when cables (or any conductor - e.g. air conditioning lines, well
power/control/water pipes, etc.) must enter/leave a building somewhere
other than the utility service entrance.
73,
... Joe, W4TV
On 2015-06-05 2:01 PM, Peter Dougherty (W2IRT) wrote:
Once again, hello all.
For 10 years I've wondered about the best way to ground my station. If I
just had one tower it would be easy. Likewise if all my feedlines
entered at
the same place. But here this is not the case. I have two towers-a main
70-footer for HF and a 35 footer for 6m (and maybe someday a 10m Yagi as
well). The main tower is grounded via three 2" copper straps (and
stainless
steel clamps) connected to 8' copper-clad steel ground rods at the
tower's
base, and 4AWG solid bare copper wire Cadwelded to the rods and then
out to
a ground radial field. The small tower will soon be connected to one
end of
the ground field via strapping or braid.
*See the following images (an overall grounding plan and photos of both
cable entrance points):
http://i291.photobucket.com/albums/ll290/W2IRT/Ground%20Plan.jpg
http://i291.photobucket.com/albums/ll290/W2IRT/6m%20tower%20and%20inlet.jpg
http://i291.photobucket.com/albums/ll290/W2IRT/back-house1.jpg
The main tower's coaxes all connect to an Ameritron RCS-12L (8 ports,
equipped with lightning protection gas discharge tubes). The coaxes and
control lines enter the house via a 4-foot high crawlspace situated
under
the radio room, traverse about 25' of carpeted floor then rise up to the
radio desk. The secondary tower's coax enters the house via an inlet box
above floor level in the shack, about 30 feet away from the main tower's
inlet, and on the other side of the shack's floor.
There *is* a Cadwelded, bonded ground line between the main tower,
the inlet
box and the secondary tower but the problem I'm facing, and the
question I'm
asking, is where the heck do I put the single-point ground panel?
Bonding
everything so a lightning strike's rise and fall would occur
simultaneously
is something.
---------------------------------------------
Peter, W2IRT
www.facebook.com/W2IRT
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