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Hints, Tips and Solutions (Do NOT post requests for help here) If you have any useful general hints and tips for vintage technology repair and restoration, please share them here. PLEASE DO NOT POST REQUESTS FOR HELP HERE! |
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13th Sep 2010, 1:57 pm | #21 |
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Re: Gutter aerial
Pete - G4MRU
I like the idea of a screened earth - but isn't there a potential problem with this arrangement at frequencies above, say, 10 MHz, if the coax needs to be of any appreciable length - say 20 feet for example? Taking velocity factor of the co-ax into account, a quarter-wavelength at 10 MHz is about 21 feet - producing in a high-impedance at the 'receiver' end of the co-ax. Afterthought - I do accept that at this freq. & up, earthing of RF aerial currents ceases to become important - for reception purposes, that is; transmitting arrangements are a totally different matter! Al. |
13th Sep 2010, 3:08 pm | #22 |
Heptode
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Selby, North Yorkshire, UK.
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Re: Gutter aerial
Yes, my understanding is that the earth should be conductive, so in effect you need it to be wet and organic rather than sand or rock. I have lots of cunning plans in a 1950s crystal set book that show ways of attracting water to the earth conductor - ranging from digging a pit and filling it with coke, to filling a tin can with salt and burying that.
My 1950s Bush DAC34 and Pye P75A work very well with 2m of wire thrown out the window and no earth, but my Invicta AW75 is from an age when people were expected to have a decent aerial and earth at home if they were going to spend a fortune on a radio |
13th Sep 2010, 6:18 pm | #23 |
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Re: Gutter aerial
Hi.
Another small point on quick antennas. We used to say to make the best of an earth use multiple earths. So to do this we would say if spike one was 2ft deep then put the second one 2ft away, if spike one was 3ft deep then 3ft away then so on in the other direction. Not to favor one direction unless up against a wall. Then water it with your morning tea dregs. Pete G4MRU |
14th Sep 2010, 12:52 pm | #24 |
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Re: Gutter aerial
There is a potential (pun not intended) risk using an external earth, if, like most homes, the household 'earth' is the incoming neutral split off at the meter (a TNC-S system). If there is a neutral fault further back down the line there can be a large voltage between house earth and radio earth, or if they are connected a large current. Best to put a 0.1 in series with the radio earth.
For a first class radio aerial I use a Welbrook ALA100 (http://www.wellbrook.uk.com/antennas...&product_id=35), this is an amplified loop type that I have at the end of the garden, feeds lots of radios at once and doesn't need an earth. Being far from the house I get much less interference on LW/MW than in the house. |
14th Sep 2010, 1:42 pm | #25 |
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Re: Gutter aerial
You can of course buy earth spikes from an electrical wholesaler. I think they're galvanised steel. Not as conductive as copper of course, but very rigid so that you can hammer them into the ground.
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Graham. Forum Moderator Reach for your meter before you reach for your soldering iron. |
14th Sep 2010, 3:07 pm | #26 |
Dekatron
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Re: Gutter aerial
There would also be the same voltage between mains earth and the ground, so the radio earth isn't really substantially increasing the danger.
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Mending is better than Ending (cf Brave New World by Aldous Huxley) Last edited by Dave Moll; 14th Sep 2010 at 3:12 pm. Reason: added second part of sentence |
14th Sep 2010, 3:16 pm | #27 | |
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Re: Gutter aerial
Quote:
There is, AFAIK, no requirement to bond guttering and similar extraneous metalwork which is unlikely to become live. (Trying to steer it back on topic!) |
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15th Sep 2010, 10:01 am | #28 |
Heptode
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Selby, North Yorkshire, UK.
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Re: Gutter aerial
The very reason that most guttering these days is plastic and hence nicely insulated from the house, yet in a straight line and high up, is why I thought it'd make a good support for an aerial wire.
Thinking about it - my house earth is derived at the meter from the neutral wire. It's bonded to the cold water pipe at the main stop tap nearby, so the cold water pipes are earthed obviously. However - my water supply pipe is iron, so the earth circuit in the house wiring is in fact directly connected to a pretty reasonable 'real' earth as well as the neutral derived one. Or have I got that incorrect? Obviously I don't want to use the earth in the mains socket for a radio signal earth as it's rather closely coupled to a lot of noisy electrical equipment... |
15th Sep 2010, 10:52 am | #29 | |
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Re: Gutter aerial
Quote:
Back to the OP, the radiator will be a good radio earth, stick with it. |
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15th Sep 2010, 10:57 am | #30 |
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Re: Gutter aerial
This may help, or a least scare you enough to get it done properly!
http://www.rsgb.org/emc/docs/pdf/lea...leaflet-07.pdf |
20th Feb 2011, 3:38 pm | #31 | |
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Re: Gutter aerial
Quote:
If you're still looking for that excuse, here it is: Laying a paved patio right up to the house can cause problems because falling rain that would previously have been absorbed by the ground will now bounce off the hard surface. The harder the rain, the higher the bounce. What happens is that the bouncing rain is driven against the brickwork by the wind and the height of the bounce enables it to bridge the damp course. If the paving is higher than the previous ground level, the problem is even worse because the damp course is effectively lowered. So, remove a row of paving slabs adjacent to the walls and replace with gravel (and as many earth rods as you like!) |
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20th Feb 2011, 11:15 pm | #32 | |
Heptode
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Re: Gutter aerial
Quote:
Greg
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