best grounding technique

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best grounding technique

Elecraft mailing list
It seems that there are two ways of running grounding wires in the
shack: FAN - from a common ground point, individual grounding wires are
run to each piece of equipment; LINKING - a ground wire is run from each
piece of equipment to the next and eventually ending in a common ground
point. What's the group wisdom on the relative merits of these two
approaches to running grounds in the shack?
...robert
--
Robert G Strickland, PhD ABPH - KE2WY
[hidden email]
Syracuse, New York, USA

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Re: best grounding technique

Rick Bates, NK7I
The ARRL book on Grounding and Bonding is very clear.  Each piece of
gear has its OWN wire/strap to a common grounding point (a copper pipe
mounted on a wall is a common method, that being connected to the system
ground; everything to the building safety ground, more ground rods every
2x the depth of the rod).

Look at it this way, say a discharge comes in through your antenna, into
the radio, connected to your computer and other devices.  Would you
prefer that energy goes only through the radio to ground (losing the
radio) or in a series through everything else in the shack too?  The
'fan' mode you mention is preferred, give that energy EVERY chance to
seek ground BEFORE it passes through your gear.

Energy shunts (PolyPhase devises for example) at the antenna entry point
are another must.  One per feed.

I suggest reading that book, several times (it's complex) for a better
understanding.

73,
Rick NK7I

On 3/19/2021 2:06 PM, Robert G Strickland via Elecraft wrote:
> It seems that there are two ways of running grounding wires in the
> shack: FAN - from a common ground point, individual grounding wires
> are run to each piece of equipment; LINKING - a ground wire is run
> from each piece of equipment to the next and eventually ending in a
> common ground point. What's the group wisdom on the relative merits of
> these two approaches to running grounds in the shack?
> ...robert
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Re: best grounding technique

Jim Brown-10
In reply to this post by Elecraft mailing list
On 3/19/2021 2:27 PM, Walter Underwood wrote:
> Personally, I would re-read the appropriate chapter in the ARRL Grounding and Bonding book. That explains the goal of bonding equipment and gives best practices. This book will be the best $23 you spend on grounding and bonding. I’ve already read it twice, but there is no way to remember the whole thing, so I always refer back to it.
>
> https://www.arrl.org/shop/Grounding-and-Bonding-for-the-Radio-Amateur

As it happens, Ward and I are putting the finishing touches on the
second edition. The first one is very good, the second will be even better.

My take on it, about five years ago, are in this slide pdf for talks
I've done at Pacificon, Visalia, and some clubs.

http://k9yc.com/GroundingAndAudio.pdf

73, Jim K9YC
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Re: best grounding technique

Julia Tuttle
Whoa, nice! Can you let the list know when it's available? I'd love to pick
up a copy.

On Fri, Mar 19, 2021, 19:22 Jim Brown <[hidden email]> wrote:

> As it happens, Ward and I are putting the finishing touches on the
> second edition. The first one is very goodd, the second will be even better.
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Re: best grounding technique

Nate Bargmann
In reply to this post by Elecraft mailing list
Home runs from each piece to the bus bar.

If mounting in a metal rack, bond each piece to the rack and then home runs
from each rack to the bus bar.

73, Nate, N0NB

--

"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds.  The pessimist fears this is true."

Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://github.com/N0NB
GPG fingerprint: 82D6 4F6B 0E67 CD41 F689 BBA6 FB2C 5130 D55A 8819

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Re: best grounding technique

Wes Stewart-2
In reply to this post by Rick Bates, NK7I
Interesting.  I don't have (and probably won't buy) the book, but here we have a
disconnect---no pun intended.

If Rick's comment is accurate, and I have no reason to think otherwise, then
what it states is in direct conflict with what one co-author (K9YC) has preached
for years, that each box should connect to the next and there is only one
connected to the ground system.  He even calls it madness to use individual
connections to a common ground bus.

This pretty much sums up why I'm not in the market for the book.

Wes  N7WS


On 3/19/2021 2:44 PM, Rick NK7I wrote:

> The ARRL book on Grounding and Bonding is very clear.  Each piece of gear has
> its OWN wire/strap to a common grounding point (a copper pipe mounted on a
> wall is a common method, that being connected to the system ground; everything
> to the building safety ground, more ground rods every 2x the depth of the rod).
>
> Look at it this way, say a discharge comes in through your antenna, into the
> radio, connected to your computer and other devices.  Would you prefer that
> energy goes only through the radio to ground (losing the radio) or in a series
> through everything else in the shack too?  The 'fan' mode you mention is
> preferred, give that energy EVERY chance to seek ground BEFORE it passes
> through your gear.
>
> Energy shunts (PolyPhase devises for example) at the antenna entry point are
> another must.  One per feed.
>
> I suggest reading that book, several times (it's complex) for a better
> understanding.
>
> 73,
> Rick NK7I
>
> On 3/19/2021 2:06 PM, Robert G Strickland via Elecraft wrote:
>> It seems that there are two ways of running grounding wires in the shack: FAN
>> - from a common ground point, individual grounding wires are run to each
>> piece of equipment; LINKING - a ground wire is run from each piece of
>> equipment to the next and eventually ending in a common ground point. What's
>> the group wisdom on the relative merits of these two approaches to running
>> grounds in the shack?
>> ...robert

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Re: best grounding technique

Vic Rosenthal
Having a bus that runs the length of an operating desk with all the
equipment connected to it by short straps is not that different from
bonding each piece of equipment to the ones next to it. But it allows
you to remove one unit without breaking the "chain."
This is contrasted to the "star" system, in which each piece of
equipment is grounded to a central point with a relatively long ground lead.

73,
Victor, 4X6GP
Rehovot, Israel
CWops #5
Formerly K2VCO
https://www.qsl.net/k2vco/
On 20/03/2021 17:57, Wes wrote:

> Interesting.  I don't have (and probably won't buy) the book, but here
> we have a disconnect---no pun intended.
>
> If Rick's comment is accurate, and I have no reason to think otherwise,
> then what it states is in direct conflict with what one co-author (K9YC)
> has preached for years, that each box should connect to the next and
> there is only one connected to the ground system.  He even calls it
> madness to use individual connections to a common ground bus.
>
> This pretty much sums up why I'm not in the market for the book.
>
> Wes  N7WS
>
>
> On 3/19/2021 2:44 PM, Rick NK7I wrote:
>> The ARRL book on Grounding and Bonding is very clear.  Each piece of
>> gear has its OWN wire/strap to a common grounding point (a copper pipe
>> mounted on a wall is a common method, that being connected to the
>> system ground; everything to the building safety ground, more ground
>> rods every 2x the depth of the rod).
>>
>> Look at it this way, say a discharge comes in through your antenna,
>> into the radio, connected to your computer and other devices.  Would
>> you prefer that energy goes only through the radio to ground (losing
>> the radio) or in a series through everything else in the shack too?  
>> The 'fan' mode you mention is preferred, give that energy EVERY chance
>> to seek ground BEFORE it passes through your gear.
>>
>> Energy shunts (PolyPhase devises for example) at the antenna entry
>> point are another must.  One per feed.
>>
>> I suggest reading that book, several times (it's complex) for a better
>> understanding.
>>
>> 73,
>> Rick NK7I
>>
>> On 3/19/2021 2:06 PM, Robert G Strickland via Elecraft wrote:
>>> It seems that there are two ways of running grounding wires in the
>>> shack: FAN - from a common ground point, individual grounding wires
>>> are run to each piece of equipment; LINKING - a ground wire is run
>>> from each piece of equipment to the next and eventually ending in a
>>> common ground point. What's the group wisdom on the relative merits
>>> of these two approaches to running grounds in the shack?
>>> ...robert
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Re: best grounding technique

Jim Brown-10
In reply to this post by Wes Stewart-2
On 3/20/2021 8:57 AM, Wes wrote:
> If Rick's comment is accurate, and I have no reason to think otherwise,
> then what it states is in direct conflict with what one co-author (K9YC)
> has preached for years, that each box should connect to the next and
> there is only one connected to the ground system.  He even calls it
> madness to use individual connections to a common ground bus.

Ward's text on this topic does, include my recommendations for
"daisy-chain" bonding of interconnected equipment, but also downgrades
it in favor of a star WITHIN THE STATION, and with an emphasis on
keeping bonding connections short. He includes a photo I provided of
W6GJB's neatly packaged station for his contesting trailer, showing a
copper pape bonding bus just behind the equipment, with bonding
conductors to it from each piece of gear. The emphasis is on keeping
bonding conductors very short, both to minimize power line buzz and
potential differences between equipment in a lightning event. He shows
how an Al sheet laid on top of the operating desk can serve as both a
bonding plane and minimize induction onto cables laid on it. And he has
incorporated my advice that the loop area of interconnecting cables and
bonding cables should be minimized to prevent magnetic coupling by
bundling or lacing them together.

There's also very good text on proper shield connections (the Pin One
Problem), bypassing of unshielded conductors at penetrations of
enclosures. There's material on the use of ferrite chokes to prevent RF
in the shack, how to deal with end-fed antennas with a feedpoint in the
shack, and lots of other good stuff.

Another goal, covered in the last chapter which is not yet done, is to
address second floor shacks. Outside the shack, there's very good
discussion of towers, bonding of the entire premises, ground rods,
connection methods, and so on. Everything conforms to NEC and good
engineering practice.

73, Jim K9YC
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Re: best grounding technique

Phil Kane-2
In reply to this post by Nate Bargmann
On 3/19/2021 5:47 PM, Nate Bargmann wrote:

> Home runs from each piece to the bus bar.
>
> If mounting in a metal rack, bond each piece to the rack and then home runs
> from each rack to the bus bar.

Commercial communication site practice is to have a "halo" -
large-diameter wire or bus bar - all around the walls and tie each rack,
stand-alone box, conduit, cable ladder, etc. to the "halo".  This is
then connected to a similar grounding system buried around the perimeter
of the building tied to ground rods per code.  Sounds tedious but that's
what keeps the facility safe.

With thanks to my late colleague, Tom Croda, the recognized national
expert in the field of comm site power and grounding, who came to work
for my firm after retiring from Sprint and proceeded to teach us the
right way to do those things.

73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane
Elecraft K2/100   s/n 5402

 From a Clearing in the Silicon Forest
Beaverton (Washington County) Oregon

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Re: best grounding technique

Jim Brown-10
On 3/20/2021 8:05 PM, Phil Kane wrote:
> Commercial communication site practice

Note that commercial communications is VHF/UHF, with vertical antennas
at the top of towers, often on mountaintops. Our antenna systems and
site locations are often rather different. Take these differences into
account when applying them to our stations, which may be VERY different.
Their antennas, for example, are all vertical sticks on a tower.

I had the experience of setting up a ham station at a decommissioned
AT&T Long Lines microwave site on a 3,000 ft peak with a 140 ft tower
(36 ft square at the base, 24 ft square at the top), and studied their
grounding. VERY different application, VERY different budget. They spent
$1Meg on the road to the site. Walls were 14-in thick, and removable to
allow the installation of equipment. Grounding was textbook for THEIR
system, which was all microwave dishes.

73, Jim K9YC
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Re: best grounding technique

Phil Kane-2
On 3/21/2021 1:58 AM, Jim Brown wrote:

> Note that commercial communications is VHF/UHF, with vertical antennas
> at the top of towers, often on mountaintops. Our antenna systems and
> site locations are often rather different. Take these differences into
> account when applying them to our stations, which may be VERY different.
> Their antennas, for example, are all vertical sticks on a tower.

Point well taken. and the vast majority of our LMR clients' sites are a
mixture of vertical antennas, corner reflectors, small yagis, and
microwave dishes.  The cost of the ground system is a fraction of the
costs of the infrastructure and equipment including labor.

As hams, we do what we can..... especially those of us who live in areas
where it's rare to get lightning more than once a year if that much.

73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane
Elecraft K2/100   s/n 5402

 From a Clearing in the Silicon Forest
Beaverton (Washington County) Oregon

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Re: best grounding technique

Lyn WØLEN
"As hams, we do what we can..... especially those of us who live in areas
where it's rare to get lightning more than once a year if that much."

73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane
Elecraft K2/100   s/n 5402

 From a Clearing in the Silicon Forest
Beaverton (Washington County) Oregon

*************************************************
Which prompted me to find out where those areas are:

https://geology.com/articles/lightning-map.shtml


73
Lyn, W0LEN

 

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