I'm trying to avoid taking anyone's side on this discussion.  I wanted to say 
that I worked for a  company that had towers throughout the state which were 
several hundred feet tall.  Over the years, I only saw one that took a hit.  
The company was so certain their grounding specs had not been followed, that 
they made the contractor dig up the entire grounding layout.  It revealed the 
specs had not been followed.  

Certain radio and TV services need to operate 24/7 and can't shut down when 
lightening threatens.  Their grounding methods apparently prevent the towers 
from being hit .

Rich, n0ce



-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Gmail
Sent: Monday, November 6, 2017 6:12 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Elecraft] Lightening damage

I’m sure there are others with more expertise on this subject then me, however 
several texts including the new ARRL grounding book say it may be dangerous to 
disconnect antenna coax in the house. It should only be done outside.
  My daughters vertical was hit by lightening and the lightening leaped 5 feet 
from a cable on the floor to a power outlet.
Ray
W8LYJ 

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