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Re: [TowerTalk] Does prevailing grounding scheme promote large ground lo

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Does prevailing grounding scheme promote large ground loop
From: Steve London <n2icarrl@gmail.com>
Reply-to: n2ic@arrl.net
Date: Tue, 26 Jul 2016 07:37:08 -0600
List-post: <towertalk@contesting.com">mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
K9YC wrote:

The problem with this (and any) analysis of a lightning event is that it is FAR more 
>complicated than anything we can compute, simply because the voltages and currents 
induced >in any system (stuff wired together) will be different in each conductor 
depending on >WHERE the strike is, the physical geometry of the conductors that make up 
that system, how >energy from the strike gets to the earth, etc.

I can attest to that ! In 13 years of living on a dry, New Mexico hilltop, I have learned a lot about mitigating lightning damage. Frankly, the cost and effort of doing lightning protection "perfectly right" is prohibitive. The approach I have settled on is simple disconnection to keep the bulk of the lightning energy out of the house. All RF and control cables to/from the towers (I have 3 towers, with 5 rotator controls and a number of remote antenna switches) terminate on a bulkhead panel about 30 feet from the house. During lightning season (May-October), everything is disconnected at the panel, except when I am on-the-air. All AC power to the ham shack is disconnected, except when I am on-the-air (unplugged - I don't trust the small air gap in switches and relays). Yes, this makes it inconvenient to be on-the-air during the summer. Even with these measures, I have learned the hard way about interconnectedness (K9YC's "stuff wired together"). A nearby or direct hit to a tower will destroy USB ports on computers and radios, if they are interconnected with a USB cable. I have tried commercial USB optoisolators, but have found they generate too much RF noise. The latest incident was earlier this week. I had a direct hit. The only "stuff wired together" was an Astron power supply, connected to a 2 meter radio. Just before the storm, these were working fine. I unplugged the antenna from the 2 meter radio, and the AC power from the power supply. There was still a 3' long power cable connecting the power supply and 2 meter radio. After the storm, the power supply blew fuses. The root cause was a fried LM723 in the power supply, causing the voltage to go high, and the crowbar protection to be activated.

Sometimes I think moving to relatively lightning-free coastal Oregon would be a good idea !

73,
Steve, N2IC

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