That's what is used around here. The problem is with the prevalent thievery of
copper wire, our power co-op uses aluminum from near ground level to the top of
the pole. They use a crimped connection, often overdone, and I've seen them
where one wire (usually the aluminum one) breaks right at the crimp and then is
a potential noise source. The aluminum wire is attached to the pole with
staples. I've seen them driven so deeply that they cut the wire in two.
At one time when I was having a lot of power line noise they tried using barbed
staples that someone sold them on. These were copper plated steel and the
copper eventually disappeared and left rusty steel behind. Furthermore in the
AZ WX with RH near zero sometimes, the poles shrink and the staples loosen anyway.
Wes N7WS
On 10/17/2017 9:22 AM, David Robbins wrote:
That wire wrapped around the butt end of the utility pole is amazingly
called a 'butt wrap' and is a common method of installing a ground at the
base of a pole, there is no extra hardware, no driving a ground rod next to
the pole which degrades its effectiveness anyway, and no maintenance of
another junction. Also the size of the ground is much bigger than a simple
rod. Note though that it is probably a better power fault ground than a
single rod, but maybe not much better for lightning.
David Robbins K1TTT
e-mail: mailto:k1ttt@arrl.net
web: http://wiki.k1ttt.net
AR-Cluster node: 145.69MHz or telnet://k1ttt.net:7373
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