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![]() "Andy Cowley" wrote in message ... CW wrote: Effective lightning protection can be done in the amatuer station for a reasonable cost. Most though, don't do so. "Andy Cowley" wrote in message ... As I understand it, there is nothing that can work if a direct lightening strike occurs. How? How do you deal with thousands of amps? It's for certain sure that a simple spark gap will be blown to kingdom come in the first millisecond, so what happens in the next millisecond? and the one after........... I think your method must be untried, untested and 'whistling in the dark'. Andy, M1EBV lightning doesn't go on for milliseconds, 50 micro-seconds is a relatively long stroke. 30kA can go through a 12ga copper wire with no damage for 10-20 microseconds. in most cases there will actually be very little voltage between wires of a coax or twin lead just because their insulation will break down or the feedpoint of the antenna will arc over... both are naturally occuring spark gaps that actually work very well to protect equipment from direct strikes. assuming of course the tower and feedline have good grounds. where people have problems is they don't ground the shield of the coax to a single point ground along with the power lines, so they get differential voltages between grounds that has no place to go but through the equipment. properly grounded installations with relatively small arresters to limit voltage on the center conductor of the coax relative to the shield are very effective. for tube type receivers a simple spark gap is adequate, for transistorized stuff you may need lower voltage protection and should probably get something commercially made for the job. |
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