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Dave wrote:
A well grounded mast DOES NOT attract lightning any better than a non grounded mast at the same location. actually it does. both the ieee and cigre have been using lightning statistics data collected mostly from tall masts for many years. There are well known formulas used to calculate the number of strokes to a pole or power line, both include the height, and as height increases so does the number of strokes to the object. The height also skews the current distribution with higher structures more likely to get more high current strokes. But, is there a difference in strike rate between grounded and ungrounded towers of the same height. I would think that the difference would be very small, and smaller as the height gets bigger. Since the vast majority of commercial masts,towers,buildings used to collect the stats are probably grounded (Because the code requires it...), it might be hard to find decent data for "ungrounded" things. (for one thing, the equipment used to collect the strike data, until recently, probably measured the current spike on the grounding wire.. these days, you could use the RF lightning detection systems, and match up strike locations against structure locations) Maybe wooden poles? (which are only "sort of grounded") |
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