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Re: [TowerTalk] FIRST TOWER & 2ND FLOOR SHACK --HELP

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] FIRST TOWER & 2ND FLOOR SHACK --HELP
From: Jim Brown <jim@audiosystemsgroup.com>
Reply-to: jim@audiosystemsgroup.com
Date: Wed, 07 Aug 2013 10:56:39 -0700
List-post: <towertalk@contesting.com">mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
On 8/7/2013 9:59 AM, Earl Morse wrote:
  Whether you run the conduit to the top of the tower and put your polyphasers 
at that point OR run the conduit to the base of the tower and place the 
polyphasers at that point OR run conduit through the house and place the 
polyphasers at the entrance point its all about providing that alternate path 
for lightning that doesn't pass through your hamshack.

It DOES matter where Polyphasers are located -- their function is to protect the equipment to which they are connected, and they work by shorting the center conductor of the coax to the shield. For that reason, they should be as close to the equipment as practical.

That is VERY separate from the issue of grounding, which is the most critical aspect of lightning protection. I think most experts would advise that the cables go down the tower all the way to its base, be bonded to the tower at the top and bottom, and go along or in the ground to the house, where they should be bonded to the building ground, then come up to the shack. There must also be a bond from your shack ground to the building ground.

The tower itself must be grounded at its base, both to it's own concrete base (a Ufer ground) and to at least three rods, usually each bonded to a leg. This provides a short (low inductance) path to earth for a strike, which minimizes what is coupled to your home.

Remember -- lightning is not a DC event, it is an RF event, with its energy broadly centered around 1 MHz, and extending for at least one decade of frequency above and below. (that is, 100 kHz to 10 MHz). So what matters most is the inductance and the routing of the grounding conductors, not their resistance. And remember also that lightning comes into our homes from the power system, the telephone system, CATV systems, and on the wiring in our homes, so all of this stuff must be bonded together and to that central ground, usually at the point were power comes into the house.

Finally, radios do not need "an RF ground" to work, to be safe, or to minimize noise or RFI. But they DO need proper bonding, as I've described for lightning safety, and proper bonding can often help with noise and RFI.

73, Jim K9YC
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