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Mohd Nazry Mustapa wrote:
"Anyone know how to make a simple lightning arrester (Homebrew) that really work in case of lightning?" I`ve found shorted (folded) antennas are less susceptible to lightning overload than are open-circuit antennas. A folded VHF monopole fed by coax and well grounded at the tower top is nearly immune to lightning. Coax, inside, rejects common-mode propagation of lightning energy. Coax, outside, needs good grounding to make a good path around (bypass for) protected equipment. The equipment needs direct low-impedance grounding so that most surge energy is dropped across the coax, not the equipment. Coils of extra coax may be used to raise the impedance of the outside of the coax. Equipment is still vulnerable to excess differential voltage on the power wires. Perhaps, excess common-mode voltage too. Manufacturers make brute-force L-C pi-network low-pass filters for each power wire connected to the equipment. These can be homebrewed if desired. They are important in delaying the surge on the power source lines to give time for the arresters time to spark across, giving protection to the equipment. Arresters need to be fast acting and placed to protect line-to-line and line to ground. These low-pass filters and arrestors are suitable for power and control wires, not for antenna wires in most cases. I`ve used lots of gas tubes on audio and control lines but never on a coax cable where I believe they are superfluous. I`ve used tower lighting RF chokes for the inductor in the low-pass powerline filters to get the needed current carrying capability, and various breakdown devices on the input and outpur of the filter. MOV`s work well. They are fast and cheap but may require replacement at times. Power lines are susceptible to dangerous surges. Filters reduce the bandwidth of energy that must be handled by the suppressor, just as the folded antenna or short-circuit 1/4-wave stub across an antenna limits the bandwidth of lightning energy that it has to accept. Lightning and other related surges are just enormous noises. They can be suppressed with the same techniques used with weaker noise. The equipment must be sturdy to endure a lightning strike. Arresters may be compared to sturdy noise clippers. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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