T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2108.1 | | SX4GTO::WANNOOR | | Sat Feb 05 1994 18:44 | 1 |
| Why bother, when a web of copper laid inside the hull will do?
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2108.2 | Metallic Spider ? | OTOOA::MOWBRAY | This isn't a job its an Adventure | Mon Feb 07 1994 07:26 | 1 |
| what is, and where does one obtain a "Web of Copper" ?
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2108.3 | | UNIFIX::BERENS | Alan Berens | Mon Feb 07 1994 12:14 | 20 |
| re .1:
Well, a Dynaplate is very easy to install. Installing an internal copper
web/mesh/screen in a completed boat would be extremely difficult and
time-consuming.
re .2:
The usual internal copper radio ground is bronze or copper screen (eg,
window insect screen) laid up inside the deck or bonded/glued to the
underside of the deck. Easily done when building the boat, much less
easily done if you have to remove the overhead or much cabin furniture.
I don't recall the number of square feet required, but it is substantial
enough that I wouldn't even think about doing it. I've seen boats with
recessed Dynaplates -- kinda neat, actually. If you have access to the
hull in an appropriate place and don't mind cutting a large hole, the
recessing could even be done after the boat is built. I'd probably just
accept the drag of a surface mounted plate.
Alan
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2108.4 | Gime a proven Dyna size | TFH::KTISTAKIS | Mike K. | Mon Feb 07 1994 13:17 | 11 |
| O.K. let me simplify the original question.
To anyone out there with an installed SSB and a Dynaplate for Ground.
- What size is your Dynaplate?
- How effective is your transmmitt and receive.
It may be that what I already have is adequate.
I thought about using coper mesh but,like Alan said,it is kind of
difficult,and more complicated space wise.
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2108.5 | using existing infrastructure! | USHS01::DEMAREST | | Mon Feb 07 1994 13:43 | 4 |
| How does an external lead keel work?? I think I have heard of using a
wide copper web (2-3") to the keel bolts. Any comments??
Lee
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2108.6 | Screen Vs. Foil | OTOOA::MOWBRAY | This isn't a job its an Adventure | Tue Feb 08 1994 10:29 | 4 |
| re Alan's comment about the screen. Why would it be bonded to the
underside of the deck ? I suspected that we were talking building a
capacitor out through the hull to the water here ... in the same way as
we talked about earlier with tin foil in the bilges ... not so ?
|
2108.7 | SSB Installation | SOLVIT::DINNIE::ADUNNIGAN | | Tue Feb 08 1994 13:50 | 40 |
| Last year I installed a Furuno SSB on my Sabre 36. Before beginning I consulted
with several SSB "experts" and the summary of their recommendations and my
installation follows:
1) Never measure your SSB's performance by receiving range. I have
used a Radio Shack $100 portable with a SSB band and received signals
from all over the world. The only true measurement is transmitting
range.
2) Dynaplates are essentially worthless. The grounding system must be
wire mesh and as large of a surface area as possible (100 sq ft
minimum). If you spend $2,500 on a SSB and $100 on a grounding
system you will have a $100 SSB.
I was able to epoxy approximately 65 sq ft of bronze window screen
to the underside of my v-berth, main cabin and quarterberth locker
covers. This was a very timeconsuming process as the covers had to
be removed and stripped of varnish before the screen could be epoxied.
3) All thru hulls, standing rigging, pulpits, sail tracks, engine, keel,
water tanks, etc. should be tied into the wire screen with 2"wide
copper strapping.
I used a combination of #6 wire, 1"wide and 2"wide copper braid. All
connections were made with soldered terminals thru-bolted to the locker
cover, bulkhead, etc.
I have not been able to completely evaluate the performance of the grounding
system. There are so many frequencies and unlike VHF there are no calling
channels. I have to scan to find an English language conversation, jump in at
the end, and ask someone come back. During our last race/cruise to and from
Bermuda I did speak to boats in the Windward Islands, Virgin Islands, and
Puerto Rico; the Yarmouth and Halifax, Nova Scotia Coast Guard; the Gander,
Newfoundland Air Traffic Control Center; and daily conversations with "Herb"
the private weather forecaster from Bermuda. I have also placed telephone calls
through the ATT High Seas telephone operators in Ft Lauderdale and Manahawkin,
NJ.
Overall, I am very satisfied with the installation and feel that it was worth
the time and expense.
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2108.8 | Why does mesh work? What does it do? | WRKSYS::SCHUMANN | | Wed Feb 09 1994 11:06 | 8 |
| re .7
Can you explain to me in electrical terms why the wire mesh works and the
dynaplate doesn't? Is the mesh supposed to be an (AC) ground? If so, shouldn't
it be on the hull, not the locker covers? How does the overall SSB RF circuit
work?
--RS
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2108.9 | Wire mesh = ground plane? | CFSCTC::CLAFLIN | | Wed Feb 09 1994 13:05 | 17 |
| It has been years since I pushed electrons for a living, and never at RF,
so if someone knws for real, speak up.
My initial guess would be that the wire mesh makes a better ground plane
for the transmitter. I can't really explain why a mesh would be better
than the ocean for this, except by speculating that the dynaplate would
cause a local field in the water at RF frequencies. This in turn would
mean that while the dynplate makes a perfectly good DC ground connection, it
does not make a good hig frequency ground.
The same arguement would apply to lightning protection. While a given
lightning bolt is DC, the series of succesive bolts in a lightning flash
and the resulting plasma decay of each bolt comprises essentially an RF
event, hence the static on your AM receiver. Large plate area or wire mesh
will rpovide a better ground for lightning protection than a dynaplate of
comperable surface contact area.
|
2108.10 | RF ground not necessarily = DC ground | ESPO01::NEALE | Who can, do - who can't, consult | Thu Feb 10 1994 04:41 | 30 |
| From an RF man from way back (but who has probably forgotten most of it by now
:-))...
If you stick an antenna up high above the surface of the earth, it will radiate
some given amount of energy in all directions. If you erect the same antenna
immediately above an ideal infinite ground plane (i.e. perfectly conducting
sheet) then you get the effect of a "mirror image" which effectively doubles the
size of the antenna, and also concentrates the RF energy into a more horizontal
band, rather than in all directions. Energy aimed at the sky is wasted, and can
increase your effective radiated power if aimed nearer the horizon instead.
Unless you are aiming to communicate with extra-terrestrials...
The sea provides a less than perfect ground plane, but it is not bad, as long as
you can get a good ground connection to it. At RF, this does not necessarily
need to be a direct connection. What the "foil/mesh-lined hull" is giving you is
something of a ground plane in itself, and also a degree of RF coupling to the
sea outside the hull so that the sea helps as well.
The alternative is a good low-resistance (at RF) connection to the sea. A large
area metal plate (probably a low-resistance copper alloy?), bonded through thick
straps, would probably suffice - but the larger the better. What's a Dynaplate,
though (I would like to know - I had never heard the term before reading these
notes)? A large low-resistance metal plate is a large low-resistance metal
plate. There may be a lot of technology in fairing it to the hull, lowering
hydro-dynamic drag, etc, but you cannot change the physics of electrical
conductivity by giving something a fancy name. However, a direct connection does
also give a DC path to ground (well, water) which could help as part of
lightning defences.
- Brian, G4FBN
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2108.11 | Try an Antenna Tuner and wire into the water | DPDMAI::CLEVELAND | Grounded on The Rock | Thu Feb 10 1994 12:32 | 20 |
| What I did to mount my Ham gear in my boat is to run my antenna up near
the backstay and use a MFJ Antenna tuner to zero out my SWR to 1.1 on
all bands. I then ran the ground to my zinc that I hung off the boat,
or clip it to the anchor chain when at anchor.
It get's out great, although is directional. As my antenna is at the
same angle as my backstay, and parallel to it when raised, it radiates
best towards the rear of my boat and less towards the front.
Folks talking with me on the radio notice a 1 or 2 S-meter drop in my
transmissions if I am swinging on my anchor rode. That's
something akin to full volume down to about 60% volume for those of you
who don't have S-meters on their rigs. The only time it matters is if
the conditions are poor to begin with.
I run about 100W output using a ICOM rig and depending on band and time
of day can work from Africa to Honolulu to Chile.
Hope this adds to the creative Juices!
Robert - WB7VVV
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2108.12 | What a "Dynaplate" is. | UNIFIX::FRENCH | Bill French 381-1859 | Thu Feb 10 1994 14:35 | 11 |
| A dynaplate is a porus metal (bronze maybe?) block somewhat smaller
than a brick. Becuase it is porous, it has a very large surface area
compared to its volume. It's purpose is to provide a radio ground.
I was noticing in by just arrived "M & E" catalog, that they advertise
the dynaplate as a "LORAN ground". Don't know if it is more effective
with LORAN than SSB, or just that they sell a lot more LORAN sets.
Bill
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2108.13 | watch how you wire it in! | SANDZ::WAGNER | Scott | Fri Feb 11 1994 12:27 | 17 |
|
I'm not sure of the bonding deal- If I `glassed in a screen to the
INSIDE of the hull, I would treat it like another metal appendage, not
a ground plate- `cuz it's not. It's more like the plate of a capacitor,
the other plate being the water, the insulator being your hull. Now, as
frequency goes up, capacitors look like short circuits, so, yeah, it's
a really good RF ground. But don't mix&match when lightning comes
around! Bond everything straight to the keel, or some sort of EXTERNAL
hunk of metal. If you make that mesh part of the circuit, I'd be afraid
of funky things happening in a lightning storm.
I'm not sure about the dynaplate for >10W power ranges.
Now, has anybody ever looked at bottom paint conductivity??? You
might have a really fine, preinstalled, inherent plate!
Scott (technerd third class)
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2108.14 | Groundless? | SX4GTO::WANNOOR | | Mon Feb 21 1994 15:45 | 8 |
| We used a SmartTuner with our SSB and just connected the ground to our
diesel tanks and general 12V ground system. We had a crystal clear
conversation with a ham in England from the Galapagos Islands, and the
system generally got us to the High Seas Operator within about 2,000
miles, so if you have nice big conductive tanks, that seems to work
well. Also, there are perfectly acceptable groundless antenna systems
you can use. Talk to your marine SSB person. Incidentally, out RF
output was around 150W.
|
2108.15 | How good is good? | TFH::KTISTAKIS | Mike K. | Tue Feb 22 1994 09:39 | 42 |
| re. : 7
I have also consulted the" experts" and I understand that the wire mesh
system of 65 sq.ft. of surface area is better than the Dynaplate I have
right now ( 20 sq.ft.)or the one I am planning to install (40 sq.ft.)
However I don't believe that the Dynaplate is worthless.
You may be able to transmit 6-10 thousand miles,I'll be happy with 2-3 thou.
It is like my sextant,it is plastic and not as accurate as the Tayana
sextant but it will take me there even if it is a couple miles off the
mark.
re. : 10
The Dynaplate is the market name of a sintered-bronze plate used as
hull bonding installed on the the outside under the hull.
The common dynaplates for marine usage come in 4 sizes
2"W x 1/2"H x 6"L equivalent to 12 sq.ft.of surfase area
2 1/2"W x 1/2"H x 8"L " " 20 " "
3"W x 1/2"H x 12"L " " 40 " "
6"W x 1/2"H x 18"L " " 80 "
For an SSB intallation the larger surface area the better and 50 sq.ft.
is the minimum.
Also the sq.footage indicated by the Dynaplate sizes by the mfg. is
overstated.
re. : 14
It seems to me that if you have connect the SSB ground to your diesel
tanks you are grounded to the hull bonding system in which case if the
boat is fiberglass with encapsulated keel you must have an outside plate
probably a Dynaplate.If you do what size is it?
Mike K. N1MBE
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2108.16 | Voodoo Electronics? | WRKSYS::SCHUMANN | | Tue Feb 22 1994 10:36 | 56 |
| Does a dynaplate actually do anything useful? If so, how exactly does it
work?
The claim (as I understand it) is that the dynaplate has more surface area
than an equivalent size flat plate, and therefore forms a better Ohmic
connection to the ocean. This seems reasonable at an intuitive level.
But to fully understand this system, one needs to consider the (seawater)
current path from the dynaplate-to-seawater interface out to the ocean.
Examine the stylized cross section of a dynaplate shown below:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dynaplate
.--+---. .--+---. .--+---. .--+---.
| | | | | | | | | | | |
| > | | > | | > | | > |
| < | | < | | < | | < |
| > | | > | | > | | > |
| < | | < | | < | | < |
| > | | > | | > | | > |
| < | | < | | < | | < |
| | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | |
__________' | `------' | `------' | `------' | `------------
Note that the current from the deep pockets must pass through the resistance
of the seawater channels to get to the open ocean. Now compare this
to a flat metal plate of the same total thickness:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Solid metal plate
| | | |
> > > >
< < < <
> > > >
< < < <
> > > >
< < < <
| | | |
| | | |
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The resistors are still there, but they're solid metal, so presumably much
lower resistance than the seawater.
It's possible that surface corrosion and contamination might play a role in the
overall resistance. If this is the case, having more surface area could help.
But you might be able to do better by using a material that is not as likely
to corrode and become contaminated, e.g. zinc. (Does a Dynaplate become
"gummed up" as it gets older?)
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2108.17 | | MR3MI1::BORZUMATO | | Tue Feb 22 1994 11:01 | 13 |
| I had one on the last boat i owned. I honestly could not tell the
difference between whith dynaplate and without. I did not notice
any clogging. However i'm no expert on electrical anything,
so i may not be adding anything here.
The manufacturer had some metal straps in the bilge, connected to the
strut bolts, and use these for grounding.
JIm
|