[TowerTalk] Re: Floating Ground Steel Building?

doc kd4e at verizon.net
Fri Jul 2 18:58:50 EDT 2004


> I'm not a concrete expert but I think that the concrete stays moist for most of its life.
> Cheers, Steve     K7LXC

I understand that the concrete in the Hoover Dam is still curing!
Imagine hw many centuries it will be before the concrete in the new 
massive Chinese dam cures?

I guess I am being confused by the differing descriptions of
how a UFER ground actually works.

Is the essential idea that the lightning energy is so well distributed
across the rebar within the slab that it slowly bleeds-off through the
moisture in the concrete and dissipates?

Does this then mean that as the concrete cures the UFER ground becomes 
incrementally less and less efficient?  Also, is a UFER ground in a 
highly sandy and excellent-drainage locale such as ours on a rise here 
in West Central Florida also likely to be less efficient than within
a different soil type and locale?

It is best that I worry about grounding issue now before we break
ground in a few weeks!

73, doc kd4e


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