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Bob Collis wrote:
"What measures beyond un-plugging the antenna from the equipment in the shack is recommended to prevent damage from static and lightning damage?" Commercial services don`t shut down when storm clouds gather. They must operate despite lightning crashes. I began working in broadcast plants in 1949. None had any damage despite frequent direct hits. First, no lightning made it through a very important item, the tower lighting choke. Every tower lighting wire on the tower, beacon, side lights, and neutral has a winding on a big ceramic coil form. The tower side of these windings must present a high impedance to the R-F. They have no shunts to ground. The line sides of these coils have each their bypass capacitors and thyrite arrestors to ground. It nworks. The power line is free from serious transients. Towers sit on base insulators which are shunted with arc-gaps which rarely if ever fire. Another spot gets all the action. It is the Faraday screen between the primary and sexcondary of an air-cored R-F transformer which couples the tower to the antenna system. The Faraday screen is a comb-like structure of metal fingers grounded securely along one edge. The tines protrude open-circuit into the air like a row of soldiers. Coils share an axis on either side of this metal comb. Surface of this Faraday screen is pock-marked like the surface of the moon. This is where the lightning finds its way to ground. Lightning gets an inhospitable reception by the transmitter coax too. The inside surface of the shield and the outside surface of the inner conductor have inductance to oppose the lightning (a common-mode current) and these conductors are tightly coupled along their length. Shunt capacitance couples the two surfaces too. A transient trying to make its way down both conductors at once is stiffly rejected.. This usually triggers a flash over. Transmitters usually have a circuit to sense this and it momentarily kills the transmitter to prevent follow through of an r-f arc fed by the transmitter. Working with VHF transmitters and receivers, I found that the same princoples used on medium wave radios worked very wel at VHF too. No lightning damage to transistorized base stations with antennas at the highest points for miles around. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |