i don't suppose you were able to ground this thing to NEC...Mike500 said:Here's one that I finished, today.
The entire mounting, including the dish was aligned and set up from the balcony.
The signal meter pegs at 101 and 119, with a decent 110 signal.
Mike500 said:Check out this photo;
pro96 said:There was no chance of asking thet same neighbor if you could possibly mount the dish next to his/hers?
RandallA said:"outdoor outlet by using a hospital grade plug"
Just trying to learn more here. What's so special about this kind of outlet? I've seen the regular and "heavy duty" outlets but never heard of "a hospital grade". Do you have to special order those somewhere?
Again just curious.
Mike500 said:Hospital Grade is an NEC and UL listing. It has special crush durability and pull out standards than regular plugs and outlets. Basically, it is made to survive, without electrical current leakage in harsh enviornments. It is usually nylon and marked with a green dot and the words, "Hospital Grade." The stuff is not cheap.
sksatellite said:I wonder what the cost on this setting. In 99% of the apartment I did installed, no one want to spend a buck extra to any installation, my most install on this will be the cost from fencing department, under $5.00 material. It seem people live at apartment knew they do has the grounding problem, but seem no one care about the system ground or no ground.
I rarely see any electrical outlet at the bacolny, even it does, I still will not ground the system through this, the main problem is, its some body's property, second, I do not has the electrical license to do electrical work, open the wall plate and attach the ground wire to the plug, anything go wrong, you shoot the whole house electrical down. I think the number 8 or number 10 wire is too thick for the wall plug., and incase if there a direct hit to the dish, the wall plug ground side can not handle this.
THis just my 2 cents.