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Default stainless steel foil instead of copper for grounding Ham radio?

On Thu, 11 Oct 2007 09:48:49 -0400, Martin Baxter
wrote:

Evan Gatehouse wrote:

Never seen this discussed befo

Could I use thin stainless steel foil instead of copper foil in the
bilge as a ground for a long wire (backstay antenna) ham radio setup?

Evan Gatehouse


You may get some electrolysis where your copper ground connects to the
foil, if you have any water in the bilge and it's saline you certainly
will. You'll probably end up with a fairly high resistance (bad)
connection in short order.

Cheers
Marty


Higher resistance then the connection to the stainless back stay?


Bruce in Bangkok
(brucepaigeATgmailDOTcom)
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Default stainless steel foil instead of copper for grounding Ham radio?

On Fri, 12 Oct 2007 09:51:03 -0400, Martin Baxter
wrote:

wrote:

On Thu, 11 Oct 2007 09:48:49 -0400, Martin Baxter
wrote:

Evan Gatehouse wrote:

Never seen this discussed befo

Could I use thin stainless steel foil instead of copper foil in the
bilge as a ground for a long wire (backstay antenna) ham radio setup?

Evan Gatehouse

You may get some electrolysis where your copper ground connects to the
foil, if you have any water in the bilge and it's saline you certainly
will. You'll probably end up with a fairly high resistance (bad)
connection in short order.

Cheers
Marty


Higher resistance then the connection to the stainless back stay?


Only if your backstay spends long periods of time submerged, but then
you'll probably have other larger problems. ;-)

Cheers
Marty

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To obtain capacitance coupling to the ocean the plate has only to be
below the external water line and I have not seen too many boats with
bilge water that high.

Further if the plate is only acting as the ground plane in an antenna
system then to avoid electrolyses the RF ground should be connected to
the plate through high voltage capacitors thus no DC current on the
plate.

If connections are made with proper tin plated wire and terminals
there is no reason that corrosion should be any more a problem then
with any other electrical systems mounted below the cabin sole.



Bruce in Bangkok
(brucepaigeATgmailDOTcom)
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Default stainless steel foil instead of copper for grounding Ham radio?

Bruce in Alaska wrote in news:fast-
:

If the "Plate" is to used to be one side of a Capacative

Coupling
for the RF Grounding of an MF/HF Antenna System, then your

"Best
Solution" is to use a material with the Lowest Resistance,

Highest
Surface Area, encase it in the Thinest Dielectric Insulating
Film available, and mount it as close as possible to the

SeaWater.
No High Voltage Capacitor, required, as the Dielectric Film

will
be the DC Current Insulator.



Next time you're at sea and bored to tears, connect 100' of
plastic covered wire to the ground post on your tuner, sealed up
on the open end, if you like. The plastic is the "thin
dielectric film" in Bruce's eloquent description. It keeps the
water from eating the wire. Toss it overboard and let it trail
out in the ocean behind the boat, but DON'T FORGET TO REEL IT IN
BEFORE YOU ENTER HARBOR!

There, now you have a great "ocean RF ground" without rummaging
around down in the bilgewater and rats.

Try it before and after with someone at a distance you know and
see how much difference he sees in your signal "out there". It
makes about 5 S-units on Lionheart. Works great, cheap, easy to
deploy and retrieve, not to mention fun.

Oh, before I stop, I wanna mention:

DON'T PUT ANY SHINY CAN TOP AS A DRAG CHUTE LITTLE SEA ANCHOR TO
HOLD IT OUT TIGHT! "Something BIG!" ate my cat food tin can! It
also ate about 35' off the end of my wire! Musta been a WHOPPER!

"They", whoever "they" are, can't grab just the open-ended wire.

Larry
--
Maybe "they" were attracted to my melodious LSB on 75 meters!


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Default stainless steel foil instead of copper for grounding Ham radio?

On Sat, 13 Oct 2007 01:48:48 +0000, Larry wrote:

DON'T PUT ANY SHINY CAN TOP AS A DRAG CHUTE LITTLE SEA ANCHOR TO
HOLD IT OUT TIGHT! "Something BIG!" ate my cat food tin can! It
also ate about 35' off the end of my wire! Musta been a WHOPPER!

"They", whoever "they" are, can't grab just the open-ended wire.


Ships used to dangle a long line with a spinner on the end from the
stern of a boat or ship. It was attached to a mechanical counter. This
was called a taffrail log. [The one you threw was a chip log.]
Sometimes fish would disappear the spinner. I am surprised how seldom
it seems to have happened.

Casady
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