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Mine was at 274.32 Meters
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WRXB215 reacted to a post in a topic: Just passed my General class test on Saturday!!!!
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Question re: grounding for lightning protection
WRXB215 replied to WRTC928's question in Technical Discussion
Very good explanations in this thread. Ground because lightning. Bond because potential. -
WRXB215 reacted to an answer to a question: Question re: grounding for lightning protection
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SteveShannon reacted to a post in a topic: Winslow repeater
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Question re: grounding for lightning protection
WRTC928 replied to WRTC928's question in Technical Discussion
Okay, now it makes sense. -
Question re: grounding for lightning protection
WRTC928 replied to WRTC928's question in Technical Discussion
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Another one: in the app, a compass-based tool to estimate line of sight (or lack thereof) in while traveling. In the mountains I live in, that would be INVALUABLE. I’m thinking compass pointer when you select a repeater, a distance-to readout, and (perhaps) a range field from the owner’s input too.
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WRUU653 reacted to a post in a topic: What's a radio good for anyway?
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WRUU653 reacted to a post in a topic: What's a radio good for anyway?
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WRUU653 reacted to a post in a topic: What's a radio good for anyway?
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WRUU653 reacted to a post in a topic: What's a radio good for anyway?
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Seems like the site has been a bit buggy lately, I got it to show up with stale turned on. Looks like it’s been over a year since the owner updated. @Ark1 try sending the owner a message and ask him about the repeater. They might appreciate knowing that their page fell into stale and that they just need to log into their repeater account to make it update.
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WRUU653 reacted to a post in a topic: Winslow repeater
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WRUU653 reacted to a post in a topic: Just passed my General class test on Saturday!!!!
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k4drw joined the community
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Just passed my General class test on Saturday!!!!
OffRoaderX replied to WRPL700's topic in Amateur Radio (Ham)
A Glad Ham! -
Question re: grounding for lightning protection
WRKC935 replied to WRTC928's question in Technical Discussion
To explain it really simple. If you have a ground rod on one end of your house for your service and another one at the other end of the house with your radio gear and they are not bonded together. If you have a strike, even a ground strike at one end of the house, a tree near the house, or whatever at that end. The lightning will COME IN the one ground, go through your equipment via the safety ground (bottom pin on power cord) across the equipment / power supply, into the radio then back out to the coax or ground wire, then out to the ground rod it's all hooked to. That is the difference of potential that is talked about. The ground is NOT a perfect conductor. And it's not unreasonable to see 50 Kv or more across 10 feet of ground during a strike. I install public safety radio sites, including ones that are co-located dispatch centers with radio towers. Key part of this is the dispatchers wear headsets that as far as lightning goes, a direct path exists between the top of that tower and their headsets. You BOND everything. The headset jack gets bonded, the furniture, the equipment, the racks the equipment is in, the radios, the wiring between the radios and the console electronics, the coaxes entering the building with a surge suppressor, then outside the building, at the base of the tower, every 100 foot up the tower and then right at the connection point to the antenna. The tower gets bonded to all this. Then there are ground rods on every leg of the tower. Those are bonded together, called a tower ground loop. Then the building has a ring around it with ground rods every ten feet again in a loop. Those rings are bonded together, there are lines that go out into the property with more ground rods that are every 10 feet. All the connections are done with CadWeld or 15 ton compression connections with a hydraulic press. All that is bonded to the service entrance ground. Then in the building, everything that is metal that is a fixture gets grounded. Meaning file cabinets, conduits, desks, window and door frames. Anything that not immediately movable. Of course, air handlers, plumbing, and the like are also bonded back to the ground along with the building frame if it's conductive. A lot of people will question the required wire gauge, stating that a number 2 wire could never hold the current of a direct strike. And that's only partly true. Lightning is very fast. Wire will carry a very high amount of current for a very short amount of time. Anyone that's ever shorted something across a battery will recognize that whatever it was didn't instantly turn to plasma and vanish. It takes some time for the wire to heat up and then catch fire. And longer for it to burn in half. It's that fact that allows a number 2 conductor to take the abuse of being hit across and not just being vaporized. Yes, there are instances that heavier wire is needed. Like the ground rings, runs longer than 50 feet and situations where a multipoint grounding bar is located where a number of devices are connected to a single point with number 6 wires. But a number 6 wire, at least with the R56 install standard, is the minimum required wire gauge for any ground and if it's connected to a ground bar with other devices or grounded objects, then the wire going from that ground bar back the the master / main ground bar needs to be a number 2. OH, and what you are referring to as a 'house ground' is the electrical service ground. And at a tower site it IS bonded to the site grounding system. Google the R56 standard and read over the site grounding requirements for a tower site. -
It still appears in the database, but browsing the map it doesn’t appear. I don’t know why. I tried it with offline and stale both turned on.
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WSDX877 started following 462.700 Montgomery county PA repeater
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Vary Strong 462.7000 Using a Tone of DPL 351 in and around Monco and Philadelphia area. I normally use it but no one seems to answer depending on 822 Anthony answers you back .
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Just passed my General class test on Saturday!!!!
SteveShannon replied to WRPL700's topic in Amateur Radio (Ham)
You are the opposite of a “Sad Ham”. Great job! -
Just passed my General class test on Saturday!!!!
WSEZ864 replied to WRPL700's topic in Amateur Radio (Ham)
I just came back from our club's Field Day exercise. I spent about an hour as a control operator with an unlicensed operator, showing him how to make contacts and a little bit on how to operate the radio (tuning, notch filtering, RF gain vs AF volume). He had 22 contacts on 40 meter phone (7.2-7.3 mHz) when I turned him over to another licensed operator, most across the country and a couple in Canada. He was very excited and was having a great time. -
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Question re: grounding for lightning protection
SteveShannon replied to WRTC928's question in Technical Discussion
Obviously you don’t ground a fiberglass mast, but your coax shield is attached to part of the antenna somewhere and it will develop a charge as air currents pass over it. Now the difference in potentials is between the metal parts of the antenna connected to the shield of the coax and the service ground, again going through your equipment and possibly you. One of the purposes of a surge suppressor (commonly called a lightning protector but nobody guarantees that) is to allow you to bond the coax shield to the grounding system. -
Question re: grounding for lightning protection
WRYZ926 replied to WRTC928's question in Technical Discussion
It's no different than using a chimney mount or a satellite dish mount on your roof. You run the proper sized ground wire from the antenna/mount to ground. Look at a properly installed satellite dish antenna. There will be a ground wire running with the coax. And that ground wire should be bonded to your service ground before the coax enters the structure. The same goes for cable TV, there will be a ground wire coming off the feed to your home and it to will be grounded to the service ground when installed correctly. - Yesterday
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Question re: grounding for lightning protection
WRTC928 replied to WRTC928's question in Technical Discussion
How does it change the calculations if the antenna is mounted on something non-conductive like a fiberglass mast? -
Coax size between repeater and duplexer
SteveShannon replied to Defender92's question in Technical Discussion
Use one of the many coax loss calculators to see if the loss for that length is acceptable to you. -
Dogs like us struggle with keyboards. I'm trying to get into CW. Strait key obviously. Paddles are out of the question.
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Question re: grounding for lightning protection
WRYZ926 replied to WRTC928's question in Technical Discussion
Unless I misread the NEC and other sources, the tower should have its own ground and be bonded to the service ground. This is correct. Steve did a good job of expelling things -
Question re: grounding for lightning protection
SteveShannon replied to WRTC928's question in Technical Discussion
Let’s disregard lightning protection for a few minutes and just talk about bonding to your house service ground. Your tower is sort of grounded. We all agree with that I think. It’s embedded in an imperfect conductor, concrete, at the bottom. To improve the grounding a ground wire runs from each leg of the tower to a ground rod. But any two separate ground rods are almost always at different potentials. Whenever you have different potentials between two points in a circuit you will have electric currents flowing from one point to the other. So, the three or four legs of the tower are bonded together using a material that is more conductive than the tower itself. Otherwise you have current flowing between the legs of your tower. If current flows between the legs of your tower over time the metal of the tower will corrode. Bonding between the three or four legs provides an easier path for the current to flow which keeps the legs all at the same potential. In addition your antenna mount is certainly connected electrically to your tower and your coax shield is connected to your antenna mount. Your coax shield then runs to your radio. If you have a watt meter, amplifier, or any other device between your radio and your antenna, they are all connected serially via the coax shield. Their metal cases are all connected to the coax shield. So all of the devices in your shack are connected together via the coax shield. If a power surge comes through the shield (static, lightning, unicorn farts, whatever) it is going to cause current to flow through your equipment because that’s the most direct path. By bonding the chassis of all those devices to a single point, we provide a much better path that doesn’t flow through those devices. So that’s why we use a single point ground. But remember, that single point ground is connected to ground at the tower. You power your radio with a power supply that’s plugged into your house power. Its case is connected to the ground wire in the outlet which runs back to the service panel where it’s bonded to the service ground for the utility power coming into your house. It has to be because NEC says so. So let’s say you don’t have your single point ground bonded to your service ground. You reach out to touch your radio and at the same time your brush your other hand on the power supply. The potential of your tower ground, which is what your one hand is touching, is probably different than the potential of the service ground, which is what your other hand is feeling. And it’s DC. Your heart can be stopped by as little as 1/10 of an ampere. So you die. So we bond the tower ground to the utility ground to ensure they are at the same potential and save your life. Also with fewer ground currents in the shack we hear less noise. -
What happened to the Winslow repeater in NW Arkansas? It doesn't come up on the gmrs map and it does not seem to work for me anymore.
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I’m thinking I’m going to build a repeater. I’m making a shopping list. I want to use two Kenwood tk-8180 radios and a mobile Celwave 633-6a-2 duplexer. I keep seeing images of people using what looks like rg400 coax from the radios to the duplexer. I used lmr400uf ultra flex from DX Engineering to connect my base station and I have some left over. But the lmr400uf is still stiff for such a small distance from radio to duplexer. If I use a smaller coax like the rg400 vs the lmr400uf will it make that much of a difference? thank you!
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Question re: grounding for lightning protection
AdmiralCochrane replied to WRTC928's question in Technical Discussion
So, a home antenna tower shouldn't have it's own ground? Just bond to house ground? -
Question re: grounding for lightning protection
WRTC928 replied to WRTC928's question in Technical Discussion
I'm not following you. What does that have to do with lightning protection? What kinds of problems will it cause? To be clear, I'm not being confrontational. I'm really trying to understand this.