So, how do you know if you have a good ground
or not? If there's stray RF all over the place
I usually assume there's a bad ground, but unless
it's really obvious like this, how do you tell?
On Wed, 10 April 2002, "Jim Lux" wrote
>
> Nope.. I haven't tried it for RF (got a standard
ground rod hammered into
> the ground).. My house's electrical service, though,
does use a UFER ground.
> A bit of web searching should turn up some info on RF
properties though..
> Lightning protection and RF are very similar
applications...
>
> I was more interested in pointing out that the
surface area of a ground rod
> isn't all that huge... so a buried 2x2 foot copper
plate could actually be a
> "better" ground...
>
> A lot also depends on where your water table is, how
wet the soil is,
> capacitive coupling, etc.
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Bill Axelrod" <bill@axelrods.org>
> To: <jimlux@earthlink.net>
> Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2002 8:32 PM
> Subject: Re: [Towertalk] Grounds, UFER grounds
>
>
> > This is an interesting thread since one of my goals
this spring is to
> > install a better system ground. Jim, if I read
your posting correctly,
> you
> > say that I would be essentially equally served with
a 10x10 inch plate
> than
> > I would with a 1/2" diameter rod 10 feet long.
> >
> > Does that pertain to the RF ground as well as the
DC ground? If you use
> > such a ground, how have you fared with it?
> >
> > Thanks and 73... Bill K3WA bill@axelrods.org
>
>
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