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RE: frozen ground ground
Original poster: "Lau, Gary by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>" <Gary.Lau-at-hp-dot-com>
The problem with the water-hose-through-the-pipe trick is that it tends to
wash the dirt and silt away, leaving only rock and pebbles in contact with
the pipe. This results in a very poor connection to the earth.
I would not imagine that frozen earth would be nearly so troublesome as
rocks. A good sledge hammer should persuade a steel ground rod right
through the frost line, if rocks are not an issue.
Gary Lau
MA, USA
Original poster: "kent by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>"
<toyhatsu-at-pcisys-dot-net>
Matt,
I can't remember who I got this from (maybe a Richard Quick post) and I
appologise to that person. Use a 6-8 foot piece of 1/2 or 3/4 inch copper
water pipe and lead solder a standard copper faucet connection on the end.
Attach a garden hose to the connection and the other end to a hot water tap
(for winter). If I remember right it is very easy to push the copper pipe
in the ground as the water displaces the dirt on the way down.
Hope this helps,
Kent
> I'm wanting to ground my tesla coil but because of the time of year, there
is
> no way of driving a stake into the ground or even turning some earth to
put a
> piece of flashing in. Also I don't know if the frozen ground would act too
> well
> of a ground anyway. How would you guys suggest I ground my coil? I was
> thinking
> about driving 20 or 30 really long nails into a piece of plywood then
> connecting them all on the top of the board. I would then place that on
the
> ground and jump on it or something to push into into the earth at least
some.
> Does anyone think that might work? If not, do any of you have a suggestion
of
> how I might ground the coil?
>
> Matt Morrissette
>
>