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Re: [TowerTalk] Fw: w7ekb & ground rods

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Fw: w7ekb & ground rods
From: Patrick Greenlee <patrick_g@windstream.net>
Date: Tue, 20 Jan 2015 09:11:54 -0600
List-post: <towertalk@contesting.com">mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
I have 2 each factory made "T" post drivers, one old fashioned unit and one with an internal spring to help lift the driver in preparation for the next down stroke. They help but... mine are two feet long so won't drive the last 2 feet of rod and it is awkward to do the last couple feet they will do as you are either on your knees or bent way over.

I read the English gentleman's reference and his is good stuff but in my case I am using a demo hammer not a drill. No rotary motion just hammer blows and no drill type chuck so the referenced adapter is not useable. It is easy to make an adapter by using a chisel made for the demo hammer, cutting off the chisel tip and welding on a piece of conduit or pipe to form a cup so the "business end" of the tool does not slip off the ground (earth) rod.

Patrick


On 1/19/2015 7:25 PM, Roger (K8RI) on TT wrote:
On 1/19/2015 1:44 PM, Patrick Greenlee wrote:

Make a "driver" which is a piece of pipe with a cap screwed on, or welded on handles. creating an extension to get the top of the rod is not difficult. No hammers needed so you don't have to worry about your aim. I've busted off a few sledge hammer handles due to poor aim. <:-)) Hitting the end of that ground rod with the sledge hammer handle doesn't take many repeats to separate handle from head.

73

Roger (K8RI)

Just in case my experience may help someone...

The last 1/2, especially the last 1/4 of a ground rod is often much harder to drive than the first part. I have used a sledge before but... you can bend the rod and then it just seems to want to bend more and not go deeper. Use a length of metal tubing or pipe slid over the end of the rod. You can tape it in place or... This keeps the rod from bending when using a large hammer (sledge.) I use two lengths of pipe. First one is about 2 1/2 ft long. When that starts going into the ground I switch to a shorter one about a foot or so long. I have sledges ranging from 8 lb to 14 lb and can swing them pretty forcefully when needed (6'2" 215 lbs). The pipe over the rod thing works well for me.

I also have an electric demo hammer (small electric jack hammer.) I made a rod driving tool for it. I used a piece of conduit driven over a length of a regular chisel made to fit the hammer. Bought it cheap at Harbor Freight and cut it in half. One end is used to make the rod driver tool. I welded the conduit to the cut off chisel. Being thrifty I ground the scrap piece with the chisel tip to the shape of the part that mates with the hammer. My hammer doesn't drive rods in really hard dirt very fast but takes little effort on my part and with patience will do a terrific job. I have never needed the pipe over the rod when driving with the electric hammer but there could be a first time.

Good luck.

Patrick  NJ5G


On 1/19/2015 9:19 AM, Jim Lux wrote:
On 1/18/15 9:53 PM, Kelly Taylor wrote:
It seems to me a valid question to ask on this thread: Do you gain anything
by, for example, drilling a hole to get a ground rod deeper?

If you think about it, the answer might not be so simple.

The point of a ground rod is to maximize electrical contact with the ground. If you have to drill 48 inches of an eight-foot rod and don't employ some kind of conductive filler (concrete, bentonite, etc.) to bond the rod to the rock, how much better off are you than just putting in a 48-inch rod? Even
if you do use bentonite, is rock a good connection?

If that's the case, what would be wrong with cutting the eight-foot rod into
two 48-inch rods and driving them 96 inches apart?

The point of eight- or ten-foot ground rods is to get eight or ten feet of
contact area, not necessarily to get eight or ten feet deep, yes?



Yes, and two short rods would work as well, if not better, than 1 big rod.

However, there is a potential depth related issue: soil moisture varies a lot in the first few feet, and in a lot of places, the chemical composition of the soil changes (top soil vs subsoil). That's not really addressed in the building code, though.

For what it's worth, the reason the code expresses a preference for Ufer grounds(concrete encased grounding electrodes) is just this sort of problem. A big block of concrete 20 feet long and a foot square is going to have a lot of contact area with the surrounding soil, in a lot of places, so local anomalies of dry or loosely compacted soil aren't going to be as big a problem.



Just curious on all this.

73, kelly
ve4xt


On 1/18/15 10:04 PM, "Bill Aycock" <billaycock@mediacombb.net> wrote:



-----Original Message-----
From: Bill Aycock
Sent: Sunday, January 18, 2015
7:23 PM
To: Ken
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] w7ekb & ground rods

Ken--
I was once
told (Unofficially) by a power line guy that the length was more
important
than depth, and a rod driven at an angle was often the only option
when rock
was a problem.
However, Mr. Murphy ruled against me and I only knew I had a
rock problem
when I had only about 8" left to go.
Bill--W4BSG

-----Original
Message-----
From: Ken
Sent: Sunday, January 18, 2015 7:00 PM
To:
maflynn@theflynn.org
Cc: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk]
w7ekb & ground rods

If I may ask, what¹s the ³appropriate tool² when you have
a rock layer 40²
down?  i tried a hammer drill, waste of time.  I rented an
SDS-MAX hammer
and I got one in all the way, four others only made it most of
the way.   So
what is the recommendation?

Ken WA8JXM

On Jan 18, 2015, at
7:46 PM, Martin A Flynn <maflynn@theflynn.org> wrote:

Ran this past one of
the code enforcement guys in the county. Surprising
response:

"We make
you buy a UL listed panel board and breakers -  what makes you
think you
can build a grounding system that is equal to UL *and*  be able
to prove it
in court if there is a problem? Buy the listed rod(s) and
drive them with
the appropriate
tool"

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