Not trying to tell you how to do, but I would suggest that you do a search on the internet and
look for a copy of the Motorola R56 standard. Not trying to be a supporter of any one company
over another, but that standard does have a good section on tower grounding and site grounding.
As for the coax, yes you should put some surge protection on it before the radio. The
effectiveness of your efforts will depend on just how good your "ground system" is. I use the
word system because no one thing will provide total protection. You need a good ground
"System" (more than one ground rod) for the tower, surge protection on the AC power being
used, surge protection on any telephone lines being used and on the coax cables being used.
The tower ground system is probably the most important effort you can put into the "system"
to protect your equipment. Ground rods use the resistance of the soil to provide the total
low resistance that your looking for. In doing this they rely on what many call the cone of
influence around them. If you place ground rods too close, the cone of influence will overlap
and not produce the lowest resistance you can obtain. Along these lines, the best spacing
then is to place the ground rods at least twice the distance of their length apart. In simple
terms, if your using 8 foot ground rods, you place them at least 16 feet apart. If your using
10 foot ground rods, you would space them 20 feet apart.
The grounding connections should all be made with exotheric welds. This provides the lowest
resistance connection and won't have and corrosion over time to reduce the low resistance
connection. Caution should be used on making the grounding connection to towers. You
don't want to just place bare copper wire on the galvanized tower legs. Over time, the
copper will react with the zinc and the zinc will be leached out of the galvanization on the
tower. Over time you will have rust taking hold and start to destroy the tower. If you
don't have a grounding plate on the tower, then the best second choice would be to use
a bronze grounding clamp to be the interface between the galvanized tower and the copper
wire. Many commercial radio carriers have used plated wire to reduce this problem. They have
also standardized on using # 2 solid copper to reduce oxidization of the ground wire itself.
Hope this provides you with some guidance in your efforts.
Jim
wqgj587 wrote:Getting ready to set up my own tower. I know how to ground the tower itself.
For the first month or so, a temporary radio will be housed in a steel box mounted to the tower,, then the permanent one will be housed beside in small , very small shelter.
What more will need to be done as far as lightning control beside good copper grounding on the tower itself.
Any sort of inline coax grounding?
Thanks for any advise
Tom