| Home |
| Search |
| Today's Posts |
|
#20
|
|||
|
|||
|
Roy Lewallen wrote in
: Ed wrote: Roger, Lightning is DC. How could it be " RF " if it has no "frequency" ? Ed If you're not convinced after reading the responses, turn on your radio the next time a lightning storm is anywhere nearby -- or for that matter, anywhere within skip propagation range. Then explain how it is your radio is hearing DC. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Indeed Roy, rather than argue that lightning doesn't contain AC components, one could more cogently argue that it is *not* DC. It is evident that many hams treat lighting as DC in the design of their lightning protection system (eg small conductor diameter, sharp bends, loops, u-turns etc in down conductors), but if you pick up the simplest models for analysing a lightning down conductor, they treat it as excited by a double ramp current, and the down conductor as an inducance. Such a model is not a DC model. Owen |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | |||
| #4, #6 & #8 aluminum ground wire? | Antenna | |||
| improvised ground system | Antenna | |||
| Performance of a system of Ground Radials | Antenna | |||
| water well ground system | Antenna | |||
| Ground system for a vertical antenna | Antenna | |||