Hey All,

I'm new to the club!  Lightening report from a long time ago!

I was able to make a good 80/160-meter dipole with the help of my former 
father-in-law WF5W (Silent Key) back in 2001. We were able to put the antenna 
60 feet into the trees and it was fantastic!  Had a storm come in while I was 
doing some early weekend chores.
The power shut down briefly and at the same time I heard the thunderclap!

Lightning struck the east pine tree of the antenna span! The Lightening did a 
good job of removing the tree's bark it then jumped over the nylon rope and 
destroyed the ceramic insulator, vaporized 3 feet of the antenna copper, and 
destroyed the home-made coil ( I think I have the burned coil still, Looking).

The main strike was on the Pine tree, but a feeder strike found my phone line 
and house ground at the same time.

Lost the following!

One great antenna and its mounting point!
All land line phones and an answering machine!
One brand knew refrigerator!

MY Ten Tec Omni D survived as I had disconnected the feed line just before the 
storm and place the cable in a ceramic coffee cup.  The PL259 did not survive 
the strike at the ceramic coffee cup end and at the ballast!






Douglas Kimpel

Chief Engineer

KKHT, KNTH

Houston, Texas

713-206-2146 Cell

713-260-6129 Office

________________________________
From: BVARC <[email protected]> on behalf of Ron Bosch via BVARC 
<[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, May 26, 2021 7:46 PM
To: BRAZOS VALLEY AMATEUR RADIO CLUB <[email protected]>
Cc: Ron Bosch <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [BVARC] Lightning Strike Prevention

Keith,
Did you also lose your TV's and other electronics?  Did you lose any 
transceivers not connected to your mains?  The fact is that a lightning strike 
on or very near your house is going to impress current on any antenna system, 
or analogue thereof, in the near field, and the amount of energy carried by 
that antenna system is directly proportional to wire length to that antenna or 
antenna analogue.  The largest antenna analogue in our houses is the wiring 
system of the house itself, and a residential ground, while being a good short 
path, is not usually very efficient compared to the ground system of a 
commercial building or a broadcast tower.  That being said, the odds of taking 
such a hit are small by ground area and reduced exponentially by the relative 
heights of the surroundings.  The object lesson being that if you have the 
highest thing in large square footage connected electrically to your equipment, 
you are increasing your odds of a strike significantly.  Unfortunately, the 
best thing for getting a great signal on radio is the worst thing to do for 
protecting yourself from lightning strikes, which makes perfect sense if you 
realize that we are in the hobby of taking a small powered sine wave electrical 
signal from the atmosphere and responding to it using a slightly higher powered 
electrical sine wave :-)  The folks of us that do that most efficiently are the 
most likely to be the victims of the fact that the system is, by definition, 
very good at attracting a tens billion times higher potential static DC 
capacitive discharge.

Ron
KE4DRF

On Wed, May 26, 2021 at 7:16 PM Keith Dutson via BVARC 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Some useful info in this post, but shows lack of facts.  For example, it is 
well known and documented that lightning can strike from cloud to ground and 
vice versa.

My station has been damaged by lightning several times.  The worst damage was 
in May, 2019, when a large bolt struck my 150 foot tower.  This was witnessed 
by my daughter and her husband who were outside at the time.  The station 
furniture in the shack was being moved at that time and there were no antennas 
connected.  However, all units were plugged into power and connected to 
computers.  ALL computers and transceivers were destroyed, and the linear 
amplifiers were damaged in the power supply section.  There were several signs 
of lightning flashover at signal and power connections.  I was standing in the 
shack at the time of the strike, and there was no sound, but it felt like the 
time in military basic combat training where I felt the concussion of dynamite 
blasts.

Now I have relay controlled disconnect of power and antennas for all stations.  
The disconnect grounds antennas and rigs.

I did collect insurance.  The claim was for about $25,000, and I got about 
$22,000 after deductible.

73, Keith NM5G

On Wednesday, May 26, 2021, 09:40:06 AM CDT, Will Gray via BVARC 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:


There are lots of books on the subject and plenty of examples visible around 
major electrical installations of how to prevent damage by lightning.  
Lightning occurs when there is a large charge difference present, normally 
caused by rain carrying electrons from clouds to ground.  If there is no path 
to deplete the charge and when the charge is great enough, the electrons go 
back to the more positively charged area of the clouds above.  The strike is 
from ground to cloud.  The use of several ground rods tied together and 
connected to power grounds, water pipes, gas pipes, and the antenna system 
tends to deplete the charge to the earth, preventing the strike.  Unplug, 
disconnect and ground your equipment.  During an electrical storm stay away 
from doors, windows and chimneys.  Get in your vehicle and close the doors.

Safety!
Will Gray, KB7QL

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