What he should have done was: Make two service loops.
Cut at the center of the two loops.
Install fittings & connect to a ground block.
Connect the ground / messenger line to the ground block
instead of the panel cover
Connect a #10 ground wire from the ground block to the
ground bond
Clamp the ground wire to the ground bond.
Your system will work fine forever but is not correctly grounded. Experts disagree on the results of not having a correct ground for the system but the job calls for the above.
The other end of the wire attached to the sat line should be attached to the dish mast.
Joe
Joe I am a little confused as to what you mean by two service loops??
The first thing we need to know is where did the installer bring your coax in at. Was it near the service panel? The reason I asked this is it sounds like his point of entry with your coax was not near your service panel and he intended just to run a ground wire to your panel and ground it there or to a cold water pipe. As Joe stated above this will not affect your satellite service. The importance of grounding your equipment is not an electrical issue but a static issue. It protects your equipment from lighting in the area during a storm. While it may or may not protect you from a direct hit, it protects you from lighting in the area during a storm. Lighting gives off a static discharge even when it doesnt hit anything. Even lighting in the clouds cause this. Also this is what NEC (national electric code) calls for. With that said this is what I would have done under the two circumstances.
**If your coax enters near your service panel**
Install ground block at coax entrance.
Run #10awg wire from ground block to service ground rod and attach with split bolt.
Attach ground wire from dish to ground block.
**If your coax enters at a different point**
Install ground block at coax entrance.
Install
new ground rod at coax entry point.
Bond your new ground rod to your service ground rod with #6awg wire.
Run #10awg wire from ground block to ground rod.
Attach ground wire from dish to ground block.
Under the first example you could use your cold water pipe instead of your ground rod if it's within 5 feet of your entrance point.