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Download Chapter 10 - Electrical, Antenna and RF Safety
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Chapter 10 – Electrical, Antenna Structure and RF Safety Practices • • • • • • • Open and Short Circuits Electrical Safety Grounding RF Environmental Safety Practices RF Awareness Guidelines Maximum Permissible Exposure (MPE) Limits Limiting RF Exposure T0-1 Normal, Open and Short Circuits • Normal Circuit – When normal current is flowing through the circuit • Open Circuit – When the current flow is interrupted by switch or fuse – Circuit break presents an extremely high resistance. • Short Circuit – When the current flowing through the circuit is following a “shorter” low resistance path between the power source terminals. – Allows high current to flow in the circuit T0-2 Normal, Open and Short Circuits SW SW + + R E R E I=E/R I=0 Normal Circuit Open Circuit SW Short circuit is a very low resistance path across voltage source. + R E I Current can be very high and possibly result in a fire. A fuse in the circuit can protect against a short circuit condition by forming an open circuit. Short Circuit T0-3 Fuses • A device made of metal that will heat up and melts when a certain amount of current flows in a circuit. • A fuse creates an open circuit when blown. • A fuse should never be used in the neutral or ground line of a ac power circuit. • In a mobile installation, fuses should be installed in both negative and positive supply leads as close to the battery as possible. T0-4 Electrical Safety Guidelines • A main station power switch should be used to turn off all equipment at once. • Never operate equipment without proper shields installed over all circuit components. – A safety interlock can be used to automatically turn off power when a shield or cover is removed. • High voltage power capacitors may remain charged even if power has been turned off. – Should be manually discharged before servicing equipment. T0-5 Electrical Safety Guidelines (Cont’d) • Electrical codes require threewire power cords and plugs on many tools and appliances. – The “hot” wire is usually black. – The “neutral” wire is usually white. – The frame/ground wire is usually green or bare wire. • Do not install higher current capacity fuses in an existing circuit. T0-6 Electrical Safety Guidelines (Cont’d) • Antenna/tower safety – Always wear a safety belt in good condition, a helmet and safety glasses when climbing a tower. – Do not stand under a tower when someone is climbing – Keep antennas and towers away from electrical power lines. • Always respect electricity – As little as 100 mA of current can be fatal. – The minimum voltage that can be dangerous to humans is 30 volts. T0-7 Grounding • All station equipment should be connected to a good ground. – The best ground is provided by ground rods located near the station. – All rods must be connected together to form a single grounding system. • All antennas, feed lines and rotor cables should be grounded for effective lightning protection – The best protection is to disconnect all cables and ground the cables. T0-8 Grounding T0-9 RF Environmental Safety Practices While Amateur radio is a safe activity, there has been considerable discussion and concern in recent years about the possible hazards of electromagnetic radiation (EMR) including both RF energy and power frequency (50-60 Hz) electromagnetic fields. T0-10 RF Environmental Safety Practices • RF Energy – RF energy is electric and magnetic energy between 3 kHz and 300 GHz. – RF and 60 Hz fields are nonionizing radiation. X-rays, gamma rays and some ultraviolet radiation are classified as ionizing radiation. • Thermal Effects – RF exposure limits for the human body is frequency dependent. – Amateur RF exposure for SSB and CW operations is reduced due to low transmission duty cycles. T0-11 RF Awareness Guidelines • Confine antenna radiation to the radiating elements. Provide a single, good station ground, and eliminate radiation from transmission lines. Use good coaxial cable, not open-wire lines or end-fed antennas that come directly into the transmitter area. • No person should near any transmitting antenna while it is in use. This is especially true for mobile or ground mounted vertical antennas. Avoid transmitting with more than 25 watts in a VHF mobile installation unless it is possible to first measure the RF fields inside the vehicle. At the 1 KW level, both HF and VHF directional antennas should be at least 35 ft above inhabited areas. Avoid using indoor and attic-mounted antennas if at all possible. T0-12 RF Awareness Guidelines (Cont’d) • Don’t operate high-power amplifiers with the covers removed, especially at VHF/UHF frequencies. • Never look into the open end of an activated UHF/SHF length of microwave waveguide or point it toward anyone. Never point a high-gain, narrow-bandwidth antenna toward people. Use caution if aiming an EME array toward the horizon. • When using hand-held transceivers, keep the antenna away from your head and use the lowest power necessary to maintain communications. Use a separate microphone and hold the rig as far away as possible. T0-13 RF Awareness Guidelines (Cont’d) • Don’t work on antennas that have RF energy applied. • Don’t stand or sit close to a power supply or linear amplifier when the ac power is turned on. Stay at least 24 inches away from power transformers, electrical fans and of other sources of high-level 60 Hz magnetic fields. T0-14 FCC RF Exposure Regulations • Maximum Permissible Exposure (MPE) – Regulations control exposure to RF fields, not the strength of RF fields. – All radio stations must comply with the MPE requirements. – MPE limits are specified in: • Maximum electric field (Volts/meter) • Maximum magnetic field (Amperes/meter) • Power density (mWatt/cm2) – If multiple MPE limits are specified for a given frequency and a station exceeds a single limit, then the station is not in compliance. T0-15 Limits to Maximum Permissible Exposure (MPE) Frequency Range (MHz) Electric Field Strength (V/m) Magnetic Field Strength (A/m) Power Density (mW/cm2) Averaging Time (minutes) (A) Limits for Occupational/Controlled Exposure 0.3 to 3.0 614 1.63 100 (Note 2) 6 3.0 to 30 1842/f 4.89/f 900/f2 (Note 2) 6 30 to 300 61.4 0.163 1.0 6 300 to 1500 - - f/300 6 1500 to 100,000 - - 5 6 (B) Limits for General Population/Uncontrolled Exposure 0.3 to 1.34 614 1.63 100 (Note 2) 30 1.34 to 30 824/f 2.19/f 180/f2 (Note 2) 30 30 to 300 27.5 0.073 0.2 30 300 to 1500 - - f/1500 30 1500 to 100,000 - - 1.0 30 Notes: 1. f = frequency in MHz 2. Power density is plane wave equivalent power density. T0-16 MPE Power Density Limits 100 100 100 mW/cm2 10 1 1 5 Controlled 5 1 1 Uncontrolled 1 0.1 1 10 100 0.2 0.1 .3 to 3 1000 10000 100000 0.2 HF VHF 3 to 30 30 to 300 UHF 300 to 1500 1500 to 100000 Mhz T0-17 FCC RF Exposure Regulations • Environments – A controlled environment is one in which the people who are being exposed are aware of the exposure and can take steps to minimize that exposure. • FCC has determined that amateur operators and members of their families fall into this environment category. – An uncontrolled environment is one in which the people being exposed are not normally aware of the exposure. • The uncontrolled environment limits are more stringent than the controlled environment limits. T0-18 FCC RF Exposure Regulations • Station Evaluations – FCC requires that certain amateur stations be evaluated for MPE compliance. – FCC Office of Engineering and Technology (OET) Bulletin 65 and the Amateur Supplement to that Bulletin contains tables to assist in MPE compliance evaluations. – Power density levels in the FCC tables can be adjusted for the duty cycle of the operating environment being used. • Averaged over 6 minutes for a controlled environment. • Averaged over 30 minutes for an uncontrolled environment. T0-19 FCC RF Exposure Regulations • Categorical Exemptions – FCC has exempted certain stations from the MPE evaluation requirement: • If the transmitter output PEP is less than or equal to limits specified in Section 97.13(c). – Exemption includes a VHF transceiver of 50 watts or less. • Certain repeater stations. • Hand-held radios and mobile radios using a push-to-talk button. T0-20 Power Thresholds for Routine Evaluations 97.13(c) Wavelength Band Evaluation Required if Power* (watts) Exceeds 160m 500 80 m 500 75 m 500 40 m 500 30 m 425 20 m 225 17 m 125 15 m 100 12 m 75 10 m 50 VHF (all bands) 50 * Transmitter power = Peak-envelope power input to antenna. T0-21 Routine Station Evaluations • An amateur can determine that his station complies with RF exposure regulations by using a variety of methods: – By measuring the field strength using calibrated instruments. – By calculation, based on FCC OET Bulletin No. 65 – By calculation, using computer modeling. • Evaluation records should be retained by the amateur licensee. T0-22 Station Evaluation Using Tables T0-23 Field Strengths Around Your Antenna • Field strengths around an antenna can be determined by direct measurement, using calibrated instruments, or by calculations using either tables or computer software. • For analysis purposes, the area around an antenna is divided into the following regions: – Reactive near field • Considered to be within a half wavelength of antenna – Radiating near field • Field strength varies as inverse square of distance – Radiating far field T0-24 Field Strengths Around Your Antenna Dipole Antenna 2L2 λ Far Radiating Field Reactive Field L Near Radiating Field T0-25 Limiting RF Exposure • Reduce transmitter power • Raise your antenna higher in the air and farther away from your neighbor’s property line – Half-wavelength dipole antennas generally generate a stronger RF field directly under the antenna that other types of antennas. • Do not aim your antenna in a direction where people are likely to be located. • Select an operating frequency with a higher MPE limit. T0-26 Limiting RF Exposure (Cont’d) • Use an emission with a lower duty cycle. – Single side-band (SSB) generally produces the lowest duty cycle. • Reduce your actual transmitting time – In a controlled environment, the RF exposure is averaged over any 6 minute period. – In a non-controlled environment, the RF exposure is average over any 30 minute period. T0-27