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On Sun, 1 Feb 2004 13:04:47 +0200, "don bryant"
wrote: Man, this one goes back a ways. But back to the main question...How far should a fence be place around a tower. Most of the answers given referred to the "step voltage" case. There is another important factor, Side Flashes. A person or animal should not be to near a tower since the flash heading to ground can take a parallel path There are just too many things to be taken into consideration. There are ground currents which produce some pretty impressive voltage drops per foot as you go away from the tower base. There are induced currents in metal objects which of course produces voltages. Sometimes those volt ages can be as much as several thousand volts per meter in the conductor from a strike a mile away. Typically, most damage, as I understand, is done by induced current and voltage from nearby strikes rather than direct hits. if one is standing close by. I don;t know the distance, but I would stay 10/15 feet away, just in case. It is side flashes that get people standing under trees. Plus, there is the danger under trees from fragments of the tree, as well as part of it falling on you. In Johannesburg, we get terrific The problem with "nearby" is the ground current and its associated voltages as well as the "side flashes". Most livestock farmers have seen cows, and horses laying near an electric fence that have been killed by lightening. Generally they were killed due to the voltage difference between their feet which sent a current through their bodies. Even a ground fault in the electrical system that applies 110 volts directly to a ground rod at the base of a vertical can produce lethal voltage drops over a few feet near the base of the vertical. I had one grab me and refuse to let go until I fell over and my knees broke contact with the wet ground. (and I was hanging onto a bare copper wire tied to a ground rod.) Which brings me to... Some times with a truely impressive strike that has hundreds of thousands of amps and a very steep rise time, the current in the tower rises so quickly, it produces one whale of a magnetic field that quenches the current flow. When that happens the lightening has to go some where and it gets off the tower. It may even get off near the top and follow a guy wire, or just jump through the air. A fence around a tower, or even around a lot with a tower in the center can have some very impressive currents and voltages induced when the tower takes a strike. Were I going to fence a tower, then I think I'd fence my entire back yard. 73 Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com lighting and all thatch roof houses are required to have a vertical rod about 1/4 wave on 40 meters).I know all this because my uncle was a musical genius, a truly fabulous conductor. He was hit by lighting. Joke...sorry)Don ZS6BTP |
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Lightning protection question revisited | Antenna |