You guys, well some of you are mixing to things 1) the building code requirement to ground an antenna is for the protection of the building. The building code don't care if you electronics is fried or not. The wire and ground rod keep the antenna mast at earth potential.
2) Those surge protectors and grounding your electronics to a common point an al other advice then grounding the most to a rod by the nearest route down the side of the house. These are different things So, outdoor antenna are different from indoor antenna in that if you indoor antenna is struck the house is already pretty much toasted. You still might want a surge protector to protect the receiver. The question is if you need to buy a $40 surge protector for your $8 Motorola Encore receiver? But no question if you need a group wire in the mast, even for that $8 gps receiver because that wire protects the house Part of the equation is where you live. In many years of living in Redondo Beach, CA I never hear of anyone or anything being =damaged by lightening. We don't even get lighting here but twice a year if that. On the other hand I had god protection on my sailboat as that 60 for aluminum mast might be the highest thing around on the ocean for miles. That mast has a very solid connection straight to saltwater. You have to evaluate the risk and consequence. You get different answer in Orlando Florida then I get here. _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts and follow the instructions there.
