Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Richard Harrison" wrote Jack Painter wrote: "Modeling examples listed below appear to be incorrect for lightning, similar to how modeling for ocean waves cannot be done in a bathtub and even a swimming pool does not closely replicate the action of waves in a large body of water." OK. Here are full-scale examples. My company had radio towers over much of the earth. Standard practice was protection of the beacon atop the tower with a Copperweld ground rod alongside the beacon with its sharp tip pointed at the sky. No protected beacon was ever damaged by lightning. Our company headquarters skyscraper was protected by short air terminals ringing the perophery of the builsing at short regular intervals. No lightning damage yet in half a century. You may say it is squivalent to the fellow who walks into a bar with a strange contrivance suspended around his neck. Asked what the gadgst does, the new arrival says: "it`s an elephant whistle". Reply is: "There`s no elephants around here." New arrival says: "See. It works, doesn`t it?" I can assure that there have been plenty of lightning strikes safely bypassed to ground around the protected people and equipment, just as Ben Franklin and others have predicted. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI Hi Richard, because it is completely unlike you to so widely miss the point, I question whether I understood your responses correctly. The standard Franklin rods (with pointed tips) have been completely validated in their application of safely terminating lightning strikes. Nothing in the new study repudiates that in any way. It simply finds that a lightning rod of similar length, thickness and composition but with a rounded or blunt-tip, has attached lightning that was coming to it's twenty-odd foot area everytime and missed the nearby Franklin rods everytime. The study clearly restates what engineers all over the world already know, that Franklin rods work just fine. But it ADDS that the blunt-tip rods work better, end of study. Because lightning is impossible to predict, and often it strikes areas of a grounding system and building below the lightning rods (evidence is the Empire State Bldg, which has video showing dozens of strikes bypassing the Franklin rods), then if an improved rod-tip design is validated, then it is validated, simple as that. Your experience describing a pointed tip protecting a radio tower sounds rather simplistic as examples, don't you agree? Nothing could be easier than attaching lightning to the top of a tower for Pete's sake. Where lightning rod placement and design becomes critical, is in areas such as multi-level/shaped building corners, appurtenances, high explosive and flammable liquid storage, etc. Here, the best available science is used to describe how many feet apart, at what elevations, etc the air terminal system must be in order to achieve the desired level of confidence that no lightning attachment will cause damage to structures, materials or personnel. Happy New Year and best wishes, Jack Painter Virginia Beach, Virginia |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Automotive Diversity Reception problems- 98 Corvette | Antenna | |||
Poor quality low + High TV channels? How much dB in Preamp? | Antenna | |||
How to connect external antenna to GE Super Radio III | Antenna | |||
Review: Amateur Radio Companion 3rd Edition | Antenna | |||
Reception in a tin can | Antenna |