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On Jul 19, 1:03*pm, Jim Higgins wrote:
On Mon, 19 Jul 2010 09:23:53 -0700, Jim Lux wrote: Tom Horne wrote: Owen The NEC only requires 5.261 (mm)2 for the protective down conductor and 13.30 (mm)2 for the bonding conductor between electrodes. *Since those sizes are at best a bad joke Perhaps you could explain why you think it's a bad joke? *Do you think a 13 square mm conductor couldn't carry the strike current? (it can) Or, perhaps, you're thinking that there are some other design criteria that might push one towards a larger conductor (mechanical strength in the face of icing and storms might be one). Maybe E=IR has something to do with wanting a larger conductor. *The voltage between the strike point and true ground is going to be the 20 - 100 kA of the strike times the resistance of the down conductor from the strike point to true ground. *With a smaller conductor, fewer/shorter ground rods, or other conditions that raise the resistance of the path to ground that voltage will be higher and if high enough the strike will seek additional paths to ground by arcing to nearby objects closer to ground potential. That's why I tie everything together. In my case, the ground rods are minimal.. Just a few copper tubes pounded into the ground around the base of the mast. None are too deep. But I consider the ground adequate for the purpose, and it seems to be, being as I've taken strikes on that mast with no damage to anything. But I tie that ground into the electrical ground, and also the plumbing, which I clamp to just a few feet away from the base of the mast. If all grounds are at the same appx potential, and the connection to ground is up to par as far as resistance, you shouldn't see flashing over to other objects. I've never had that problem here so far. In fact, the connection to ground seems good enough that strikes to that mast are fairly silent and only make an electrical arc sound which sounds like throwing a light bulb onto the ground. On the other hand, a strike to a poorly grounded object with high resistance is hugely loud.. Say when it strikes the tree in the front yard.. It's like a 12 gauge going off. And this sound is separate from the sonic boom of the strike as it travels through the air. The sonic boom will come from overhead and is not local like the actual strike noise at the object being struck. |
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