Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Peter,
Reading that 100 sq ft were recommended gave me pause; apparently not that much is always necessary, but my bilge is broken up by numerous bulkheads or ribs, which makes this difficult. Thanks. Garland "Peter Kennedy" wrote in message ... I did it recently using roofing copper. I bought a 2 ft wide piece about 6 ft long and stuck it down in what was normally an inaccessible part of the bilge using 5200 for adhesive. I used the 2" wide strip also to connect from the receiver to the tuner and join to the copper sheet along the way. Peter Kennedy Yacht Services Marine Electrical Systems http://www.pkys.com "Garland Gray II" wrote in message news:B5nAb.37355$_h.35620@lakeread02... I'm about to install the SSB ground system in my catamaran. Since I don't have a lead keel, and my water tank is well above the w/l, seems I might be needing to lay down a lot of copper strips in the bilge. The operators manual suggested that a 3" strip separated 3" from an adjacent 3" strip would be equivalent to a 9" strip. Is this the maximum separation to achieve this phenomonem? If the strips could be 2 feet apart, and still be effective as a 2+ foot wide strip, that would save a lot of time and materials. Probably too good to be true though. But if it did wow, maybe I could lay strips in both hulls, connected together at each end, and have a monster ground plane. Since this probably wouldn't work, what is the most efficient way to make the ground system in a catamaran? |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
newbie buiding a catamaran | Boat Building | |||
tiny catamaran plans | Boat Building | |||
Fuel tanks and SSB counterpoise. | Electronics | |||
Other choice and counterpoise question | Electronics | |||
power catamaran | Boat Building |