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References: [ +subject:/^(?:^\s*(re|sv|fwd|fw)[\[\]\d]*[:>-]+\s*)*LF\:\s+RE\:\s+how\s+to\s+get\s+ground\s+rod\s+ressitance\s+low\s*$/: 3 ]

Total 3 documents matching your query.

1. Re: LF: RE: how to get ground rod ressitance low (score: 1)
Author: Chris Trayner <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, 10 Feb 2011 10:12:12 +0000
Hi Rik and others, Absolutely! The soil charges up. It's quite fun to do. Take your multimeter into the garden, put it on the Ohms range and put the meter prods into the soil some distance apart. The
/rsgb_lf_group-archives/html/rsgb_lf_group/2011-02/msg00011.html (11,411 bytes)

2. Re: LF: RE: how to get ground rod ressitance low (score: 1)
Author: "Jurgen Bartels" <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, 10 Feb 2011 11:39:47 +0100
Thanks Rik & Chris That's interesting, because all got started when I noticed increasing noise towards lower frequencies. The noise on the feedline is usually attenuated by the common mode choke at t
/rsgb_lf_group-archives/html/rsgb_lf_group/2011-02/msg00470.html (12,925 bytes)

3. LF: RE: how to get ground rod ressitance low (score: 1)
Author: Rik Strobbe <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, 10 Feb 2011 10:21:38 +0100
Hello Jürgen, ground losses (or better environmental losses) depend on a number of things: - frequency : losses are increasing at lower frequencies (so measuring DC resistance is not very meaningfull
/rsgb_lf_group-archives/html/rsgb_lf_group/2011-02/msg00823.html (13,530 bytes)


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