View Single Post
  #6   Report Post  
Old July 15th 11, 04:27 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
John Smith[_8_] John Smith[_8_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: May 2011
Posts: 160
Default World Lightning Map & 5-Year US Lightning History Map

On 7/14/2011 9:30 PM, RHF wrote:
On Jul 14, 6:19 pm, John wrote:
On 7/14/2011 4:53 PM, m II wrote:

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1


dave wrote:
.
We almost had some lightning a couple years ago. I disconnect the 43'
vertical from the tuner if there's a chance. I ground everything else.
AC Mains are below ground (dirt).


Like the gentleman said, there's nothing like using a 500 dollar radio
as a fuse to protect 50 cents worth of wire...


What a complete idiot, if that isn't just bizarre and ignorant, someone
explain a sensible point he is attempting to make.

You just don't leave radios antennas hooked up to high voltage/current
sources ... wire and fuse is something a moron would come up with.

Regards,
JS


Somewhere I read that the Real {Statistical}
Danger comes from the 1/4th Mile of Electrical
Power Grid around your Home/Building and not
so much from your own the Antenna Wire and
Ground System. More Equipment is Damaged due
to AC Power Line Surges; then EMF/ESD via the
Antenna Wires. -?-now-is-that-true-?-

Three Steps To A Safe Radio Shack Before&
During a Lighting Storm :
http://groups.google.com/group/short...c0737fb384a181

# 1 Job = Un-Plug the Radios& Equipment
from the AC Mains -first-

# 2 Job = Disconnect the Antenna Wire(s)

# 3 Job = Keep Everything in the Radio
Shack Well Grounded.

=P/S= Stay Inside Yourself -cause- the Real
{Statistical} Danger is about 1000-to-1 of
getting Hit by Lightning 'Outside' then "IN"

and so... now you know . . .
cause you read it here ~ RHF
-stay-lightning-safe-my-friends-xx-)-
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Bc0WjTT0Ps
.
-reference-original-post-
World Lightning Map& 5-Year US Lightning History Map
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.r...8f7d0c3f2dac8e
.
.


Aren't whole house surge protectors incorporated into all new homes?

If you haven't installed a whole house surge protector, and your home
lacks one, perhaps one should be installed?

I have noticed that a lot of new powerstrips/etc. seem to lack the surge
protectors ... the more in use, the more "clamping" on any
spikes/transients leaving the power plant supplying you ...

I just pulled all the outlets in my home and placed protectors on them
all, and a very large unit protects the whole house. Then, there are
those powerstrips I have, so pretty "clamped down" here.

Regards,
JS