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![]() "Richard Harrison" wrote Coax rejects common-mode lightning energy. We used zero protection across coax and never had a burnt transistor receiver front-end. Richard, could you please explain the term "common mode lightning"? I've seen you reference that many times and meant to ask what that is. Apparently an uncommon mode burned through 300' of RG8 (literally melting the end connected at the radio) and disintegrated the internal coax post inside a Drake R8B. I sent the radio to Drake, and they explained that the lightning protection inside the radio was literally exploded, but it did it's job and the radio was easily and inexpensively repaired. The coax in question was disconnected about 150' from the house, but lightning apparently jumped from the tower feed across a foot of air space and back into the PVC pipe channel housing several coax, which led to the house. The Drake was the luckiest of the second-story ungrounded shack gear. The protecton on this particular installation was multiple radial-grounds from the base of the tower. It was a very nasty strike or set of strikes, as several outbuildings on the property all suffered equipment damage. _Maybe_ this was a case of ground current from the strike jumping into the coax, but in any case several coax carried very high charges into the home. Jack |
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