We're going to install an antenna mast on the roof of a MDU. The radio equipment will be powered from an existing outdoor electric outlet box on the side of the MDU (hard wired inside the box).
The electrical outlet is not part of the MDU's electric service (it is not tied into the MDU resident's electric service ground rod), rather it connects to the management office's electric service breaker box via 50 ft. buried PVC with 16 ga. hot lead, neutral and ground. Obviously bonding the mast to the that 16 ga. ground wire that connects to the breaker box isn't going to be adequate for lightning protection.
I think the answer will be to drop my own 8 ft. ground rod near the mast and bury 70 ft. of #6 gauge copper wire back to the management office's electric meter's ground rod. Is this adequate for safety?
The electrical outlet is not part of the MDU's electric service (it is not tied into the MDU resident's electric service ground rod), rather it connects to the management office's electric service breaker box via 50 ft. buried PVC with 16 ga. hot lead, neutral and ground. Obviously bonding the mast to the that 16 ga. ground wire that connects to the breaker box isn't going to be adequate for lightning protection.
I think the answer will be to drop my own 8 ft. ground rod near the mast and bury 70 ft. of #6 gauge copper wire back to the management office's electric meter's ground rod. Is this adequate for safety?