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Hi Tom:
Hmmm... Thunderclouds, lumped or distributed? It all depends upon the application requirments... if the occurence is infrequent one may make a quasi-static assumption and invoke DC conditions. Then we can make an approximation and treat the lightning stroke just as a DC conductor. Now... Just what is the steady state DC value for a lightning stroke? Ignoring the parasitic capacitance between strokes... we can approximate it as a long vertical wire, without loading... Then... Well you get the picture [grin]. Incidently we are in a very unusual dry spell here on the barrier island off Florida's East coast... we have only had about 1/8 inch of rain in the past three months, and the whole County is on fire! Regards, -- Pete k1po Indialantic By-the-Sea, FL "Tom Donaly" wrote in message . net... Peter O. Brackett wrote: Reg: Every year there are a few reports of people struck by and often killed by lightning. Indeed Florida is the leading place in the whole world for lightning activity and lightning deaths. In Florida we have really vicious thunderstorm activity throughout the summer months. These storms come up fast, thunderheads rising upwards of 50,000 feet, with black wall clouds decending to ground level and the air thick with static and rain so hard that you cannot see more than 25 feet. Impressive stuff! I have never personally met anyone who was struck by lightning. One of my own [arbitrary length] dipoles was simply vaporized by a strike when I was not at home... the ladder line that fed it's center was also missing and there was a two foot diameter hole about a foot deep in the lawn where I had left the end of the line laying on the ground. That's where I place the ladder line when not in the shack. When I returned home after that storm, I found the rope ends at the two supports simply swinging in the wind with the insulators on the ends still intact. During the annual ARRL Field Day event, held at the peak of Florida lightning season, in June of each year, I/we quickly disconnect feedlines and throw them well away from the transmitter sites during thunderstorm approach, on several occasions during those Field Days, and from a distance and under appropriate shelter, I have personally watched arcs jumping across the air gap between the conductors of the end of ladder line lying on the ground during the passage of thunderclouds. But I have never witnessed an actual strike on one of those antennas. I don't have statistics at hand, but I can relay that most of the news reports of lightning deaths that I recall here in Florida were of the deaths of unfortunate golfers who failed to take shelter during a thunderstorm approach. I do recall a news report of someone killed by lightning on a Florida beach within the past couple of years. It would be my guess that most who are struck by lightning in Florida are visitors... As far as I can tell, most folks who live in Florida year round are very well aware of the dangers of lightning and take appropriate cautions. -- Pete k1po Indialantic By-the-Sea, FL "Reg Edwards" wrote in message ... There is much correspondence on these walls about protecting equipment and property from lightning strikes. But there is never anything said about protecting people. Where are your concerns? In this country, UK, I can't remember the last time I read in the newspaper about anybody being killed by lightning. It is extremely rare. It doesn't appear to give US citizens much cause for concern. Are you all very brave? Or have you just got used to it. Just curious. What is the annual death rate due to lightning, per head of population, in states like Florida? Do you keep statistics? How does it compare with the death rate from being chewed to death by alligators in Florida swamps? Or dying from rattlesnake bites in Arizona? Does lightning make it to the newspapers? ---- Reg. But are the thunderclouds lumped elements or transmission lines, peter? 73, Tom Donaly, KA6RUH |
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