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![]() wrote in message ... On Oct 15, 10:54 am, Ian Jackson wrote: One reason for lightning conductors (and for grounding elevated conductors, like radio antennas) is that it helps to stop a high electrostatic charge from accumulating in the air immediately above them. The intention is to PREVENT a direct lightning strike, rather than conduct a strike to ground. Of course, if a direct strike DOES occur, an antenna (and even a stout lightning conductor) may be seriously damaged. -- Ian "The only problem with that is that the charge is so quickly replenished that I think trying to bleed off the charge is a waste of time." The turn of the century genius, Testla, patented some lighting protection devices based on having an insulated "cap" at the highest object on the protected property. The "cap" would rise thousands of volts above the protected structure and this would reduce the tendency of lightning to strike. Seems to me that the federal government has lots and lots of buildings and would relatively inexpensively conduct definitive experiments to see what works and what doesn't in the area of lightning protection. So far as I know, the feds have done no such thing. |
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