Friday, March 7, 2025

Antenna Grounds Tested


 My kitchen is now connected to 3 external antennas, two with FM whip antennas, and one shortwave antenna.  Shortly I will get foundation repair and some leveling which could potentially disrupt the integrity of their grounding (to underground rods which are "bonded" to the main panel ground through a long underground wire).

All 3 wires have coax cables coming into the house.  The shield of the coax cable of each is connected to ground in external grounding boxes.

I disconnected all 3 coax cables from their receivers and measured their voltages and resistances to one another.  There were trivially small millivolt voltages I didn't write down.  The resistances were consistently around 0.5 ohms, 0.56 was my first measurement from the front to the back coax.

But this only proves they are bonded together, not that they are bonded to house ground.  So I got a 3 light AC wiring tester, for which one line lights up if the ground is good.  I plugged that tester into a 3 to 2 wire adapter to bleed off the ground test current.  I then plugged the 3 to 2 wire adapter into a bottom ac outlet so it did not contact the plate screw (which would ground it).  I connected a wire to that to the ground tab and now I can test anything for being an "acceptable" ground to this simple tester.

I tried the sink faucet and the dishwasher panel, they are not acceptable grounds.  The "grounded" light did not light up.  (The dishwasher is perhaps "multiple insulated" and the "stainless steel" is really coated in non-conductive coating.  The sink faucet is connected via PVC pipes.)

But the Grounded light did light up when I connected the wire to the shields of each of the 3 coax cables coming from outside.

I connected an ammeter in line with the wire going to the ground adapter, and measured 1.336 mA current with each of the 3 antenna coaxes.  This was actually better than the 1.333 mA I measured going back to the ground on the same wall socket.  (By contrast, there was only 0.05mA current measured to the kitchen sink faucet, though that was noticeably higher than not being connected at all, or me just holding the wire.)

Now I have some measurements I can repeat after the house leveling.

House ground resistance is supposed to be below 5 ohms.  I'm not really measuring that, but it appears my antennas and AC outlet grounds are no more than about 0.5 ohms apart, which represents the resistance of the ground wires and coax grounds, and indicates they are all bonded to house ground.

*****

After the foundation piering, I retested 2 of the grounds.  The third ground is temporarily disconnected and needs to be moved but is probably ok.

I first measured the ground to the roof peak antenna, the Magnum Dynalab ST-2.  At first it read 1.3150 ma, or about 2% lower than before.  But testing the actual house ground, it was also reading about 2% lower at 1.313.  Then when I tested the ground to the Godar 1000 antenna, it measured 1.32ma.  Retesting the other antenna again, it was now reading 1.32ma also.  So it looks like 1-2% fluctuation is normal and comparing antenna ground current with house ground current at the same moment works.  (It could be the "hot" line that is varying slightly, because what I am measuring is current flow from electrical hot to test-ground through a resistance built-in to the ground tester.)

Before the foundation work was done, I unscrewed all ground wires from their ground blocks outside but left them touching for protection.  I also loosened the plastic shields around the ground wires from being attached to the house.  Before doing the re-test, I screwed the two ground wires being tested back in to their grounding blocks outside.

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