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ray lunder wrote in
: Can I clip something on to the stainless steel backstay and expect to get a signal? Lots of sailboats have the neatest little antenna fed right into the main cabin.....where the chainplate bolts hold the shrouds to the plastic. Most of them are not grounded at this point. Hell, most of them are not grounded at all, leaving you with an ungrounded lightning rod sticking up out of the water just waiting to be hit, killing the family instantly. It's simply a credit to the conductivity of seawater that it doesn't happen more often than it does. So, if you just add another nut to a handy, existing chainplate bolt and put the hot wire of your receiver to it, you end up with a dandy antenna just waiting for a lightning hit. If you run a heavy battery cable WITHOUT those neat right angles boaters love from the bottom of the mast step to the engine block, it will shunt off MOST, but not all, of the static buildup that threatens the receiver and everyone aboard. It's not perfect but it is safer. Why didn't "they" ground everything? M-O-N-E-Y...same as always. Larry -- |
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