If you lived in North Dakota you could run a ground line out to a fracking well and connect to the 2 mile deep pipework.
Blackest background ever.
My question is what’s the optimum audiophile fill material to surround a pure copper earth rod? This Bentonite clay slurry or something else? I just got a 6 foot pure copper earth rod and have no chance of hammering it through the rock under the top soil here. So given I will be getting someone in with an long auger to drill a hole down that far it becomes a good opportunity to use a custom backfill to surround the rod. But I do not know what to use. |
@mijostyn makes a good point. If you’re really interested in obtaining a low impedance ground for audio; you might consider your water main pipe as the lower of the two. Of course we all know that our water main ground is connected to the grounding bus bar in our circuit breaker boxes (right?). The main earth electrode (your ground rod or rods) is/are also connected to this same grounding bus bar. I measured the ground resistance of my earth ground connection on my water pipe, and it was 0.35 ohms, while my ground rod measured 15.0 ohms. I only have one ground rod, but I’m planning to upgrade that to a total of 3 or 4 in the future. What I’m getting at is making your water main coming into your house (for those of us that have city water) a ground priority. You can make sure this ground delivers ultra low resistance to your circuit breaker box bus bar by making sure it’s connected between the two with a #4 AWG wire or larger (#3 AWG or larger). If you already have this in place - excellent. Making also sure the water pipe ground connection is also clean with little to no oxidation. Improving this water main connection to circuit breaker box is a task I highly recommend you have an electrician perform (if you're a homeowner). |