I think the answer lies in the ground bus. I used a 3/4" copper water
pipe along the back edge of my desk, with a short pigtail of #2 wire to
the K3. I used a yellow-jacketed Home Depot ring terminal on both ends
of the #2, and metal-tapping screws to connect to the bus.
73, Pete N4ZR
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On 4/23/2020 8:37 AM, Randy Farmer wrote:
I'm currently in the process of wiring up my new station and I happen
to be working on the equipment bonding phase for my pair of K3s SO2R
station. I'm doing my best to get decent connectivity between the
station components, but can't really figure out how to terminate large
(AWG 10) wire to the teeny 6-32 ground screws on the back of the K3,
especially since something like six bond wires need to be attached to
the transceivers. There appear to be no available ring terminals that
will fit these small screws; the smallest I can find are for #10
studs. Even by using a threaded standoff installed in the K3 ground
nut and a longer screw to stand the rings off, stacking a bunch of
these huge terminals is extremely difficult. Providing some means of
reasonably quick disconnect for servicing purposes is equally
difficult. Exactly how can I go about connecting big wires to little
ground posts?
73...
Randy, W8FN
On 4/20/2020 10:22 PM, Jim Brown wrote:
On 4/20/2020 6:08 PM, Tom Norris NB5Q wrote:
I'm asking what method and
attachment point, to each piece of equipment, you experienced K-Line
owners
use to bond the K3s, P3, SP3, etc. and then on to the station ground.
I use wires soldered to screw lugs, making sure that the attachment
point is not insulated from the chassis by paint. Some of the
equipment has a dedicated grounding screw. Shells of DB connectors
SHOULD be bonded to the equipment chassis, but not always -- some
mfrs screw up and fail to do that.
Some of my equipment goes out in the field from time to time, so I
use single circuit Power Pole connectors to make that easy. I'll use
2-6" between the lug and the PowerPole, then make a loop soldered to
a PowerPoles that connect to each piece of gear in the string (so
each connector has two wires). There are lots of suitable variations
on this, depending on how the shack is laid out.
These are the slides for my talks on station power, grounding, and
bonding. http://k9yc.com/GroundingAndAudio.pdf
73, Jim K9YC
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