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To Folsom's question, my wife's answer is, "because he's insane".My answer is more along the lines of this paper, http://www.equitech.com/support/techgrnd.htmlBetter grounding (i.e. lower impedence path to ground) = lower system noise, at least in theory, I think.I stewed about how to do this for 6 years, then it suddenly dawned on my that I have an unused salt water well 20 feet away from my exposed grounding rod, it seems like a reasonably cheap and easy experiment.It's safe (I think) my earth ground will be undisturbed.
Thanks jea48.So is Equitech's notion that, by lowering the impedence of the earth ground (with a second grounding post, a chemical ground, etc), one could lower system noise, wrong?
Sorry, a follow up. Does one test the quality of a ground by using a voltmeter and measuring the hot to ground voltage? Is the higher that voltage the lower the ground resistance? If so, the answer to my last question would be easy for me to test.Thanks again!
To measure soil resistance requires a $2500 meter and maybe 1/2 hour's work.The alternative? Just drive in a second ground rod.To get under a 5 Ohm soil resistance might cost as much as an engineer's annual salary. And maintaining it adds to the cost.
FullRangeMan said:In a large industry where I work we measure the ground R w/a regular Fluke hand meter and the precision was good.