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[email protected][_2_] trader4@optonline.net[_2_] is offline
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Default Grounding a telephone line.

On Thursday, November 28, 2013 12:30:46 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Thu, 28 Nov 2013 02:56:46 -0600, wrote:



On Wed, 27 Nov 2013 23:46:37 -0500,
wrote:



On Wed, 27 Nov 2013 21:14:26 -0600,
wrote:



When the phone company installed my outdoor phone connection box, they


installed a separate ground rod. But the one for my electric panel is


50 feet away. I'm running my own phone line from my house to another


building at quite a distance. I intend to install another outdoor box


with built in lightning protection. (same as the one from the phone


company). The ground rod from my electric service is 6 feet away. Is


there any reason not to use the same rod? It dont seem to make much


sense to drive in another rod.




Note: I intend to also ground a tv antenna to it.




The NEC requires that ALL ground electrodes must be bonded together.


It is also the recommended practice for lightning protection.


If line powered telephone equipment is the only place here this bond


occurs (incidently) that will be where any difference is reconciled.


Back in the modem days, separate grounding systems was the most common


cause of smoking modems PCs etc




The same is true of satellite installations. They usually drive a


separate rod. You should bond this to your grounding electrode system


for the service.




In that case, I may as well just use the same ground rod.




And since you mentioned the modems, as I said in my original post, the


phone line ground rod is 50 ft from the power ground rod. Being rural,


my only option for internet is a dialup modem, or spending a fortune on


satellite dish internet, which will force me to have satellite tv, and I


dont watch much tv. Every year I lose at least one modem from


lightning, even if the lightning is miles away. I've partly solved that


by unplugging the phone line from the modem when I'm offline. Maybe


that separate ground is why???? Cuz my phone lines are still wire and


underground.




Another important thing is a point of use protector at the PC that

picks up the phone line and power, sinking them to a common point.

That is in addition to a panel protector and the protection the phone

company has.although phone protectors are usually pretty lousy. If it

is a carbon element protector it is useless



Any predicitions on how soon we'll be hearing from Tom?