Audiophile-grade ground rod?


Anyone know of a high quality (purity) copper home grounding rod?

Replacing my old rusty one will be significant, but wondering if there are brands that are higher quality than others.
thanks

clustrocasual

Showing 4 responses by millercarbon

Wouldn't it be easier to simply relocate the listening room to a nice quiet nickel iron asteroid?
Millercarbon’s first post might sound like a joke (and I assume that was the intention), but there’s an element of truth to it. Ground rods in dry, low quality soil (common conditions) are not ideal. You want a low impedance path to ground and that isn’t easy to achieve. I’ve wondered how you can get around this. Multiple grounding rods should help. Some jurisdictions require at least 2. So would keeping the soil around the ground rod wet. I have to imagine there is at least one audiophile on this forum that has set up a sprinkler system to automatically water the area near the ground rod to keep electrical conductivity with the earth high. I’ve also wondered if putting a ground rod in a river bank or stream would meet code because that would for sure solve the problem.

Right. I find dry prose to be so, uh, dry. I say, variety is the spice of life!  

Besides, everyone already knows only five nines pure copper rod extruded with long grain crystals and cryogenically treated are the only acceptable grounding rods. Then just as the room is the most important element in a system the ground is the most critical element in the, er, ground. If you have the bad luck to have built on poor soil this can usually be alleviated by bulldozing down to bedrock and backfilling with a minimum 20 yards of topsoil containing a minimum 8% herkimer diamonds and mahgister sandwiches. Or you eat the mahgister sandwiches while digging, I never could get that part straight?    

First of course you did a perk test for soil drainage, and have automatic irrigation to precisely maintain soil saturation as monitored by electrodes placed no more than 1m apart around the ground rod.   

Be sure to allow 200 hours for your ground rod to burn in, warm up your ground rod before listening sessions, and whatever you do suspend the wire going to your ground rod above the ground so it doesn't touch the ground until it reaches the ground. Seriously.

Honestly, my first post ought to have been sufficiently sarcastic enough to let the OP know he's on a fool's errand. Do we really need to keep hammering on it? Audiophiles. I guess we do. As you were then.
Audiophile grade ground rod is easy. Wait till you go looking for audiophile grade ground to drive it into!