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[Towertalk] single point ground

To: <towertalk@contesting.com>
Subject: [Towertalk] single point ground
From: nwtncc@iswt.com (James C. Hall, MD)
Date: Tue, 23 Jul 2002 23:13:33 -0500
Bill:

I have a very similar setup and would be happy to send you some pictures of
what I did. My tower is 150 feet from my garage. From the tower junction
box, I routed 4 inch PVC to an old breaker box which I modified and mounted
a plate of aluminum as the SPG. I tied in the tower ground screen (#4 copper
wire with LOTS of ground rods) to the ground at the SPG - which also tied
into the utility ground. From the SPG I used 3" PVC from the top of the
breaker box and went straight up - into the floor of the shack.  I then made
a pine wood box which stays close to the baseboard in which all the cables
and ground strapping go under the desk. Now, because the RF ground situation
on the higher bands ie. 15 meters is a bit dicey, I decided to put some of
Radioworks' line isolators in with the coax. That's my setup - I'll be glad
to send you some pics.

Jamie
WB4YDL

-----Original Message-----
From: towertalk-admin@contesting.com
[mailto:towertalk-admin@contesting.com]On Behalf Of jljarvis
Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2002 7:47 PM
To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: [Towertalk] single point ground



Bill,

First, you need to recognize that the 2nd floor windows are too
far from ground to be of value.  What you do there is cosmetic,
and weather seal only.

Second, in addition to providing a ground panel at ground level
for antennas and control cables,  on the downstream (station)
side of them, I would route all cables through a piece of iron
pipe about 4' long.  Ground it, as well, to the single point.

It will act as a choke for transients which get across the
ground panel, forcing arcs to ground at the SPG.

I am assuming that what you do at the SPG provides an ESD gap,
so excess voltage is dumped to ground across all coaxes and
rotor/control cables.  ICE does this.

rgds, Jim, n2ea



In a message dated Tue, 23 Jul 2002 12:28:24 PM Eastern Standard
> Time, Bill@aa6tt.com writes:
>
> > I am considering removing a window in my garage (my ham station
> > sits on the 2nd floor, over the garage) to use as an entry point
> > for all my antenna feedlines and control cables.
> >
> > I am thinking of replacing the window with a sheet of copper cut
> > to the window frame's dimensions, drilling a series of holes for
> > double female coax feedthru connectors to connect the feedline
> > from the antenna outside the window to ICE lightning protectors
> > (the ICE units connected to the feedthru connectors via double
> > male coax connectors) on the garage side.  Copper ribbon will
> > connect the copper sheet to a series of ground rods (and the
> > telco and power gnd systems).
> >
> > I'm looking for comments on this setup before it's built.  Should
> > I be concerned about bolting the copper feed thru panel
> > directly
> > to my garage's wood frame -- is this a fire hazard?
>

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