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Technician License Course

This chapter of the Technician License Course covers safety precautions and mitigation methods for electrical injuries, as well as proper grounding and circuit protection. Learn how to respond to electrical injuries and ensure a safe amateur radio setup.

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Technician License Course

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  1. Technician License Course

  2. Technician License Course Chapter 9 Lesson Plan Module – 18 Safety & Amateur Radio

  3. Electrical Injuries

  4. Electrical Injuries • Shocks and burns.

  5. Electrical Injuries • Shocks and burns. • Low voltages can cause enough current to create problems.

  6. Electrical Injuries • Shocks and burns. • Low voltages can cause enough current to create problems. • Equipment today uses lower voltage than tube equipment but it can still cause burns.

  7. Electrical Safety

  8. Electrical Safety • Avoiding contact is the most effective way of practicing electrical safety

  9. Electrical Safety • Avoiding contact is the most effective way of practicing electrical safety • Unplug equipment before working on it

  10. Electrical Safety • Avoiding contact is the most effective way of practicing electrical safety • Unplug equipment before working on it • Keep one hand in your pocket

  11. Electrical Safety • Avoiding contact is the most effective way of practicing electrical safety • Unplug equipment before working on it • Keep one hand in your pocket • Make sure equipment is grounded

  12. Electrical Safety • Avoiding contact is the most effective way of practicing electrical safety • Unplug equipment before working on it • Keep one hand in your pocket • Make sure equipment is grounded • Use power from GFCI-protected circuits

  13. Mitigating Electrical Hazards

  14. Mitigating Electrical Hazards • If working on live equipment is required:

  15. Mitigating Electrical Hazards • If working on live equipment is required: • Remove jewelry

  16. Mitigating Electrical Hazards • If working on live equipment is required: • Remove jewelry • Avoid unintentional touching of circuitry

  17. Mitigating Electrical Hazards • If working on live equipment is required: • Remove jewelry • Avoid unintentional touching of circuitry • Never bypass safety interlocks

  18. Mitigating Electrical Hazards • If working on live equipment is required: • Remove jewelry • Avoid unintentional touching of circuitry • Never bypass safety interlocks • Discharge high-voltage points and components to ground

  19. Mitigating Electrical Hazards • If working on live equipment is required: • Remove jewelry • Avoid unintentional touching of circuitry • Never bypass safety interlocks • Discharge high-voltage points and components to ground • Capacitors can store charge after power is off

  20. Mitigating Electrical Hazards • If working on live equipment is required: • Remove jewelry • Avoid unintentional touching of circuitry • Never bypass safety interlocks • Discharge high-voltage points and components to ground • Capacitors can store charge after power is off • Storage batteries are dangerous when shorted

  21. Responding to Electrical Injury

  22. Responding to Electrical Injury • REMOVE POWER!

  23. Responding to Electrical Injury • REMOVE POWER! • Have ON/OFF switches and circuit breakers clearly marked.

  24. Responding to Electrical Injury • REMOVE POWER! • Have ON/OFF switches and circuit breakers clearly marked. • Install an emergency master power switch and make sure your family knows how to use it.

  25. Responding to Electrical Injury • REMOVE POWER! • Have ON/OFF switches and circuit breakers clearly marked. • Install an emergency master power switch and make sure your family knows how to use it. • Call for help.

  26. Responding to Electrical Injury • REMOVE POWER! • Have ON/OFF switches and circuit breakers clearly marked. • Install an emergency master power switch and make sure your family knows how to use it. • Call for help. • Learn CPR and first aid.

  27. Electrical Grounding and Circuit Protection

  28. Electrical Grounding and Circuit Protection • Make sure your station wiring meets code

  29. Electrical Grounding and Circuit Protection • Make sure your station wiring meets code • Most ham equipment does not require special wiring or circuits

  30. Electrical Grounding and Circuit Protection • Make sure your station wiring meets code • Most ham equipment does not require special wiring or circuits • Use 3-wire power cords

  31. Electrical Grounding and Circuit Protection • Make sure your station wiring meets code • Most ham equipment does not require special wiring or circuits • Use 3-wire power cords • Use circuit breakers, circuit breaker outlets, or Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter (GFCI) circuit breakers or outlets

  32. Electrical Grounding and Circuit Protection • Make sure your station wiring meets code • Most ham equipment does not require special wiring or circuits • Use 3-wire power cords • Use circuit breakers, circuit breaker outlets, or Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter (GFCI) circuit breakers or outlets • Use proper fuse or circuit breaker size

  33. Electrical Grounding and Circuit Protection • Make sure your station wiring meets code • Most ham equipment does not require special wiring or circuits • Use 3-wire power cords • Use circuit breakers, circuit breaker outlets, or Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter (GFCI) circuit breakers or outlets • Use proper fuse or circuit breaker size • Don’t overload single outlets or circuits

  34. Grounding & Bonding at RF

  35. Grounding & Bonding at RF • RF burns from “hot spots” at high RF voltage

  36. Grounding & Bonding at RF • RF burns from “hot spots” at high RF voltage • Do not cause serious injury at ham power level

  37. Grounding & Bonding at RF • RF burns from “hot spots” at high RF voltage • Do not cause serious injury at ham power level • Prevent by bonding (connecting) equipment together with heavy wire or strap – braided strap not recommended at RF

  38. Grounding & Bonding at RF • RF burns from “hot spots” at high RF voltage • Do not cause serious injury at ham power level • Prevent by bonding (connecting) equipment together with heavy wire or strap – braided strap not recommended at RF • Prevent by keeping people away from antennas and radial or counterpoise wires

  39. Grounding & Bonding at RF • RF burns from “hot spots” at high RF voltage • Do not cause serious injury at ham power level • Prevent by bonding (connecting) equipment together with heavy wire or strap – braided strap not recommended at RF • Prevent by keeping people away from antennas and radial or counterpoise wires • Ground equipment for AC safety

  40. Lightning Protection

  41. Lightning Protection • Ground antennas and towers to local code

  42. Lightning Protection • Ground antennas and towers to local code • Use 8-ft ground rod for each tower leg

  43. Lightning Protection • Ground antennas and towers to local code • Use 8-ft ground rod for each tower leg • Bond rods to tower leg and the other rods

  44. Lightning Protection • Ground antennas and towers to local code • Use 8-ft ground rod for each tower leg • Bond rods to tower leg and the other rods • Ground connections should be as short as possible

  45. Lightning Protection • Ground antennas and towers to local code • Use 8-ft ground rod for each tower leg • Bond rods to tower leg and the other rods • Ground connections should be as short as possible • Use lightning arrestors on a single ground plate where cables enter the house

  46. Lightning Protection • Ground antennas and towers to local code • Use 8-ft ground rod for each tower leg • Bond rods to tower leg and the other rods • Ground connections should be as short as possible • Use lightning arrestors on a single ground plate where cables enter the house • Unplug and disconnect equipment (including telephones and computers) and feed lines if lightning is expected

  47. RF Exposure

  48. RF Exposure • Electromagnetic radiation (EMR) is not the same as radioactivity – much lower energy

  49. RF Exposure • Electromagnetic radiation (EMR) is not the same as radioactivity – much lower energy • RF energy heats body tissues

  50. RF Exposure • Electromagnetic radiation (EMR) is not the same as radioactivity – much lower energy • RF energy heats body tissues • Heating depends on the RF intensity and frequency.

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