I have had some telephone, forum and email discussions with some members of the forum about lightning and static build up on or dishes. I have measured over 1000 volts between the ungrounded center conductor and earth (single point) ground. I used a 470K ohm resistor tapped in with a tee across the co-ax to ground, but I ran across this solution and it is so much better calculated than my solution, I felt I should post it. For our purposes the gap should be about as close as you can make it - definitely a business card or less. With the 470,000 ohm resistor the voltage never went over a couple of volts, here.
The graphic shows a method of draining charge from an antenna while also providing some protection against high voltages from static electricity. The basic idea is presented on the K2AV Folded Counterpoise antenna website. The value of the 5-Mohm resistor is not critical and just needs to be high enough to minimize its effect on antenna impedance while surviving normal operation. Power ratings of 2 watts or better are generally recommended in this application. The spark plug can be mounted directly to a grounded plate, as well.
An ordinary spark plug and a high-value non-inductive resistor (carbon composition or metal oxide) provide some inexpensive protection for static charge building up on your antenna. (Thanks, K2AV) From an ARRL newsletter, today! That is a 5 meg-ohm resistor. My 470K was a 2 watt as that is what I had.
The graphic shows a method of draining charge from an antenna while also providing some protection against high voltages from static electricity. The basic idea is presented on the K2AV Folded Counterpoise antenna website. The value of the 5-Mohm resistor is not critical and just needs to be high enough to minimize its effect on antenna impedance while surviving normal operation. Power ratings of 2 watts or better are generally recommended in this application. The spark plug can be mounted directly to a grounded plate, as well.
An ordinary spark plug and a high-value non-inductive resistor (carbon composition or metal oxide) provide some inexpensive protection for static charge building up on your antenna. (Thanks, K2AV) From an ARRL newsletter, today! That is a 5 meg-ohm resistor. My 470K was a 2 watt as that is what I had.
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