
Appendix C: Grounding and RF protection
Grounding Recommendations
115
CCCC
Gr
ounding
and
RF
C.4.2 Grounding the antenna
You can ground the antenna to the ship/hull via one or more of its mounting
bolts. Make sure to remove painting, dirt, grease etc. at the mounting holes in
order to make good electrical contact to the hull. Use serrated washers when
securing the mounting bolts and seal the joint with protective coating to avoid
corrosion.
If you are using vibration isolators at the bolts, the grounding connection
between the mounting surface and the bolts is not sufficient. In that case
mount a separate grounding wire. See Separate ground cable on page 124.
It is always recommended to establish the shortest grounding path as possible
e.g. on steel hulls the antenna should be grounded directly to the hull
1
.
However, due to the fact that this is not possible on e.g. fiberglass hulls (nor is
it preferable on aluminum hulls) a number of alternative grounding methods
are suggested in the following paragraphs.
1.
Please note that the antenna ground connection is made at the same
electrical ground potential as the
terminal
.
Antenna bottom
10 mm spacer
M10 Mounting bolt
(Stainless steel)
Mounting base
Serrated washer
(Stainless steel)
Summary of Contents for 500 FleetBroadband
Page 1: ......
Page 2: ...SAILOR 500 250 FleetBroadband INSTALLATION MANUAL ...
Page 16: ...Table of contents xiv ...
Page 22: ...Chapter 1 System units 6 IP handset and cradle ...
Page 60: ...Chapter 3 Connecting power 44 Remote on off ...
Page 100: ...Chapter 7 Troubleshooting 84 Logging of events ...
Page 124: ...Appendix B Technical specifications 108 SAILOR FleetBroadband terminal ...
Page 146: ...Appendix C Grounding and RF protection 130 Electrostatic Discharge ...
Page 154: ...Index 138 ...