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Dr Artaud wrote about his recent lightning strike, sorry for your damage
there Dr. I too, took a lightning strike a couple of years ago. Thankfully, because I took some precautions, my radio gear didn't get any damage but I can't say the same for the televisions, the cable modems, phones, etc. Questions: 1. The router and cable modem were on a different circuit from the power for the radio and DVD player. The Radio, the DVD player, and the clock radio were plugged into a spike suppressor strip. My house itself has whole house spike suppression at the power meter. I took the spike suppression strip apart to examine for damage, none was visible. If the surge entered the power system, making it to the lighting panel, why wasn't it shunted to ground by the power strip and the whole house suppression which was only about 3 feet from the panel? It may not have entered that way. Nearby strikes can induce a current into the power lines running through the house. At a distant point from the lighting panel the induced voltage could have started. As it courses its way through the house wiring looking for a ground point it will work through your appliances, etc. until it finds ground. Meanwhile, it may never make it back to the panel. 2. Could it have been electromagnetic forces that destroyed the cable modem and router? Absolutely. Every cable wire, every phone wire, printer cable, etc acts just like an antenna...picks up a voltage and carries it to the device. That nearby strike packs plenty of power to place a huge voltage on a wire. Most of these devices are low voltage and sucuumb to transients easily. 3. My equipment was not grounded or bonded. Surprisingly, the items that were destroyed near my Yaesu were items that had internal power supplies, so that a direct connection to the neutral was available. The items that were powered by transformers, including the Yaesu itself, were unaffected. I have a Uniden metal case scanner atop my Yaesu that was plugged in, and off with a mechanical switch (part of the volume control), this radio was unaffected. I also have a speaker system for my DVD and TV in the bedroom, this was also off by a mechanical switch and is transformer fed, this was also unaffected. Though the Cable Modem and Router, as described above, were always on, so is a great deal of other equipment in the house, including my main TV, DVD Player, AV Receiver, and so on. Why the preference for some equipment and not the other? Precisely what I had happen at my strike. The televisions were unplugged, but I neglected to unplug the cable tv channel boxes and when the strike entered via the cable it was all that was necessary to destroy 2 TV's, and 3 cable tv boxes, as well as the cable modem boxes. Oddly, the computers survived although one modem on a laptop could no longer be used. I plugged in a modem card and was able to work around that damage. Sometimes there's no rhyme or reason as to why some pieces of equipment survive while others don't. 4. Lastly, how can I have an outdoor antenna and survive a strike without damaging equipment? I know that I should disconnect the wire when before a storm, which I always do, but this day was not supposed to have storms, and I couldn't get to the radio in time. Was the wire more likely to be struck since it had been grounded? Unfortunately, the strike came down my tree in the backyard, obliterating a limb at the top, (a very tall tree), and traveling down the outside, casting off bark as it traveled. The line in the bark comes right to the end of my wire antenna and no lower. Could a "leader" have been initiated by the antenna grounding system that actually led to the strike? The antenna itself was several feet from the tree, tied to the tree trunk with a rubber tube. If the wire had previously been removed from the radio and simply tossed onto the floor, what may have happened with the surge? You need a SINGLE POINT GROUND SYSTEM, I'm not shouting there..just for emphasis. One and only one common ground system to which all equipment, and the entrance panel ground share. This way, if a voltage makes it onto your system, all points rise and fall at the same potential. It is a potential difference between points that allows current to flow. If all points rise and fall the same...no current flow, no damage supposedly. After my strike (which was strong enough to blow ceramic tiles to dust, and blow a 2 inch deep by 2 inch wide by 6 foot canyon in my concrete housepad under those tiles!) I contacted PolyPhaser and several other lightning companies, was invited to a 3 day lightning damage symposium by Florida Power to learn more and see the various company displays. I learned a lot. The results of which I have put up on a web site showing what I did to install more safeguards to my system. It is at http://www.knology.net/~res0958z/ I'm a bit to excess on this subject, once you've been hit you realize the vulnerabilities. And with a 65 foot tower out back, a mere 15 feet from the house, a bit more sensitive to the possibilities. Good luck with upgrading your system. Bill KC9CS Thanks for your comments, and be safe when lightning becomes an issue. Dr. Artaud |
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