Frank Jr. said:
No, the idea is for an electrical discharge outside in the hopes of not going inside. Grounding inside is mostly for other reasons.
What are the other reasons for grounding inside? I have had several problems recently after the install of the dish 1000 system. The only ground wires coming from the roof (which as a dish 1000, dish 500 @ 6.15, and a OTA Antenna) are 2 copper wires included in the coax (the coax has 2 lines per casing, plus a copper ground wire). Both Ground wires go to a screw on the bottom left of the DPP44 switch. The switch itself isn't grounded (unless you count the fact that the power inserter' power supply has a ground plug on it? sounds sketchy though) The company the article is about didn't do my install, but there has been a annoyingly large amount of problems since the dish1000 install (the thing is, the only difference I think would be that one of my dish 500s got swaped for a dish1000. One extra single coax was run and that was it)
Problems since the install -
- Shocks, Lots of em! Dorm-sized fridge in my room.......goin for a pop...ZING! (small shock almost every time), I get shociked when I touch some of my computers, one of my home theatre recievers, dish recievers, almost anything that is metal (but not everything which I find odd)
- I had 3 Hard Drives go bad in the same day suddenly in 2 seperate computers. luckily 2 of them were under a month old so Western Digital sent replacments without any hastle. The 3rd drive was about 1 1/2 years old so it was just a gonner.
- One of my home theatre recievers started to put out a weird bass signal.....not sure how else to describe it but the sub now sounds very odd on a particular reciever, works fine on other ones.
- Shocks!
In one of my rooms I have a Monster Home Theatre Power Center which I run everything through, and the equipment in that room doesn't shock me at all, nor has it had any abnormalities. - I'm actually going to get another one of those for the room I have most of my computers in, I don't want to have anymore mis-haps with hard drives, cpus, motherboards, etc.
Does this in anyway have a possibility of being a grounding issue with the dish?
The only other thing that changed was that we had a electrician come and change a 3-gang box to a 4-gang box (added a extra switch) but I would think he knew what he was doing...
I dunno, its all quite weird. Either way, from my limited knowledge of electricity/grounding, the groundwires shouldnt go to the switch, which is screwed to a piece of plywood.....Maybe everything else is a coincidence? who knows lol