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(no email)
Date: Tue Aug 10 2004 - 16:33:17 EDT
This may work but is not optimum for SSB radio frequency grounding. To get
a large ground plane you need to engage a large surface of the seawater. A
through hull fitting will not meet these requirements. A metal keel will be
a fairly good substitute if you have one.
Regards,
Andina Marie Foster,
----- Original Message -----
From: Roger Rippy
To:
Sent: Sunday, August 08, 2004 1:00 PM
Subject: lv-ab: Ground plane
IMHO, if you are a salt water cruising boat, I would simply use some
grounding braid like you can purchase from a ham radio outfit like Amatuer
Electronic Suppy and run the ground braid from the grounding post of both
the transciever and the tuner directly to the closest thru-hull (provided
that the thru-hull is bronze). I even ground my vertical antenna (hf
antenna - hustler vertical with screw on resonators) directly to the rudder
post. The long wire (backstay) does not need grounding.
This set up works very well in saltwater and even brackish water. Standing
wave ratio (SWR) is tuned by the tuner to a very acceptable level.
On a previous boat, we used copper screen that was lining the hull and
grounded to a thru-hull, but the performance was not noticably better.
Regards,
Roger Rippy
SV Tin Cup
W7RIP
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