G'day All.
As some of you may know, I have had a bit of a problem with our TV reception since a storm wrecked our antenna a few months ago.
To repair it, I used some inch gal water pipe with two parallel braces as the upper part, and three pieces of gal pipe welded together as the base.
The base is mounted to three brackets that are welded to the steel veranda pole, which is concreted into the ground. I have modified the middle bracket as a swivel point so I can lower the whole set up, very easily.
After a week of bad reception I drove an earth stake into the ground and got a very small improvement for my work.
Before the storm, we had the antenna mounted on a piece of 1 inch gal pipe, that was attached to a 4 metre long piece of 3 inch, thick-walled mild steel pipe, that was painted.
After fitting the new pole with the original antenna, and spending ages tuning and adjusting the system, I could get most channels perfectly, but about a 1/2 of them would drop out. Some worse than others.
I bought a new phased antenna array and enough quad shielded coax to reach the TV without any inline connections.
Long story short: I got only marginal improvement, and eventually found that I had to insulate the array from the pole. The reception is now perfect in dry mild wind. Yet to find out if rain and high winds will affect it.
I was curious to find out what caused the problem. With the earth disconnected I discovered a .402 volt (2.3 millamp) between the steel frame of the house and the earth stake. On the oscilloscope, a miniscule 50hz power cycle was apparent at the top of the dc voltage.
I turned the main circuit breaker off and the 50hz disappeared, but the .402 volts remained. Also I found that the voltage takes about
5-6 seconds to build up when the earthed out and then disconnected.
I can understand there being a few millivolts of 50hz AC being apparent as we are on a Single Wire Earth Return (SWER) system
Where is the 402 millivolts coming from. It was definitely wiping out the TV signal every 5-6 seconds when the pole was earthed, but not all of the time and it did get worse as the ground dried out.
I have checked all of the neutral and earth connections in the house too.



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