[TowerTalk] FW: Tower Grounds

Jeff keepwalking188 at ac0c.com
Mon Oct 16 23:15:54 EDT 2017


Thanks Dick.

I see your comment on the silver solder.  I wanted to see if you were 
referring to plain silver solder (lower temp stuff like what you would use 
with a big soldering iron), or if you were referring to the silver content 
braising rods that require a torch.

The (affordable) silver rods have 15% silver and ~80% copper content and are 
flux coated if I'm reading the spec right.

73/jeff/ac0c
www.ac0c.com
alpha-charlie-zero-charlie

-----Original Message----- 
From: Dick Blumenstein
Sent: Tuesday, October 17, 2017 10:53 AM
To: towertalk at contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] FW: Tower Grounds

Hello Jeff-

Shortly, I am going to be using 2" wide copper strapping on my tower
legs. However, I am NOT attaching them to the tower leg bolts. Instead,
I will be clamping them on each tower leg about a foot up or so from the
base and in a GENTLE ARC, running them down to a ground rod near each
tower leg, attaching them with ground rod copper clamps below the Harger
CAD weld that attaches to the rod at the top where my #2 AWG stranded
goes out to additional ground rods (like a tree branch).  I have read in
the past that silver solder might explode or melt (sorry Matt) from a
lightning strike and might not hold together.  I will, of course, use
stainless shim stock between the copper and the galvanized tower leg to
reduce galvanic corrosion.  Since I haven't done it at this time (soon,
though), it might be a little challenging to get the copper under a
couple of stainless radiator hose type clamps and then to proceed in a
"graceful" arc down to the ground rod.  We'll see how that goes for me;
which is why I selected 2" wide (and not 3" wide) copper strapping.  I
heard that lightning does not like to take sharp turns, hence, the arc
of copper and not bolting to the leg bolt.  Every time I want to lower
my crank up tower horizontally to the ground to work on the antenna
system, I will obviously have to remove the copper from under the
stainless clamps.  A bit of a pain, but so far I have not read of a
better way. At least it will allow me to look at any corrosion that
might have occurred since last time I lowered the tower.

(BTW, a little anecdote. The electrician I used for heavy duty projects
in FL, told me that he used to work at the Kennedy Space Center.  He had
to CAD weld about 2,000 (as I recall) very long ground rods around the
Vertical Assembly Building. Now, that's one heck of a ground rod system!!!)

73,

Dick, K0CAT

===================


Matt wrote on 10/16/2017 12:04 AM:
>>>   Has anybody had any experience with grounding towers with flat copper
> strap v.s. using stranded wire or copper braid (tinned or 
> ntinned)?  --jeff
> Wb7aht
>
> Hi Jeff,
>
> I feel that wide copper strap is an excellent choice because of its low
> impedance and outdoor durability.  I used 3" x.032" copper strap from each
> tower leg to tie into my ground loop.   I drilled 1.125" holes in the 
> strap
> to fit over the anchor bolt to tower base connections (all crank-up towers
> at my station).  To make clean holes, I sandwiched the strap between two
> scraps of plywood and used a forstner bit in a drill press.  The copper
> strap is dielectrically isolated from the galvanized base and bolts to
> prevent galvanic corrosion using  a pair of 1.125" ID stainless steel flat
> washers at each connection.   I also coated the connections with 
> antioxidant
> compound and it will be easy to check and service them periodically since
> they are above grade bolted connections.  I also use a separate piece of
> strap to ground the copper bulkhead bar at the tower base.  It is tied 
> into
> the ground loop with the shortest possible length.
>
> The leg straps run the shortest path over the side of the concrete base 
> then
> drop below grade where they are silver soldered to a wire ground loop that
> encircles the concrete foundation.   There are four radial grounds that 
> are
> CAD welded to the ground loop at the four corners and these extend out
> radially to about 50 ft each.  There are 4' copper clad ground rods CAD
> welded to the radials at about 8' intervals.  The tops of the rods are
> about 18" deep.   I would have used 8' rods but I have really hard caliche
> that starts at 18" deep and I just could not drive them any deeper even
> using a full size jack hammer - so I cut the 8 footers in half and doubled
> up the quantity at half the spacing.
>
> I also use wide copper strap at the single point station ground panel to
> connect to a similar ground loop at the station location.
>
> Hope this info is of use to you & good luck on your project.
>
> 73
> Matt
> KM5VI
>
>
>
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