You might find this tool interesting:Thanks. That trenching shovel might be useful this spring for adding another dedicated network cable to the remote backup server in the shed.
One of the hardest parts of the job was hammering in a new ground rod to add to the house grounding grid (three total rods bonded). The antennas, power and comm cables are all surge protected and needed a good local ground for lightning protection. Proper user network device surge protection ( to reduce Ethernet port fried issues) with power-line Ethernet can be an issue because with works better with a direct copper to copper connection on both ends without the signal sucking filtering protection circuits seen on many surge protected power strips.
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Ahh... ground rods. They way I do those is with a garden hose and copper pipe.One of the hardest parts of the job was hammering in a new ground rod to add to the house grounding grid
Is there a way to transmit ethernet between two ground rods? (Otherwise, you might just be a tad off topic!)Ahh... ground rods. They way I do those is with a garden hose and copper pipe.
For a ⅝” ground rod I use a ½“ copper pipe sweated to a T with 2 small sections of pipe for a handle (I usually use a reducing T and make the handles out of 1”).
On one handle a cap is sweated, on other a standard hose fitting, it’s nice to have one with a stopcock but you don’t have to.
Position the pipe upright where you want the rod and turn on the water. Gentle pressure will drive the pipe into the ground with amazing ease, assuming there aren’t rocks or roots to contend with, in which case it;s time for an auger.
You should have some solid to put into the hole loosely until it is filled up, then drive the rod which will go in with almost no resistance. Tamp around the top to pack it a bit. If you have a real tamper, great—if not, a foot with a good boot is enough.
Also, consider getting some conduit of the continuous plastic kind and put that in, then when you pull (or push) the cable include a pull string so expansion is just a matter of adding something to the conduit. It also allows you to use less expensive plenum cable rather than direct burial.
Well, if you can tolerate a very low data rate I think we can work something out.Is there a way to transmit ethernet between two ground rods? (Otherwise, you might just be a tad off topic!)
There's been enough favourable comments that I've decided to get the TP-Link TLPA4010P and give it a try. Otherwise I'll go for a something like a TP-Link CPE210. I'll report back in about a week!
Like my broadband used to be when it came down 5 miles of local loop!Well, if you can tolerate a very low data rate I think we can work something out.
Great news, and 15Mbit beats 0Mbit every time.Thanks everyone for all your comments. I finally installed it, and it gets all the way round the downstairs ring-main, through the distribution board, down about 10m of SWA to the shed, through another sub board to the socket on the bench, and I get 15Mbit/second, a bit of a speed drop compared to the incoming data rate, but acceptable.
Only snag is the size of the unit - when plugged into the socket there was no room for the Ethernet cable, so I had to rotate the socket by 90°. Looks a bit odd but it works.
That might have been an AM-based unit. Long ago I picked up some for about $2 each on the surplus market. Turns out they were overpriced.I remember the really buzzy intercom I made all those years ago.
That's a bit of genius in its simplicity. I've driven ground rods with a hammer drill, but it still involves a ladder. Using a tight hole in the plate to grab the rod is one of those things that you see and ask why you didn't think of it yourself.You might find this tool interesting: