Don -

Thanks for your input.  I should have gone into more detail.

We did sustain a direct (yes, direct ...) lightning strike on our house in 
March, 2012.  A freak storm after a week of 80F+ temps in Chicago.  Lightning 
struck an attic roof fan, followed the wiring to the basement, and did nearly 
$100k damage to the house.  I had NO antennas of any type up at that time.

But I did subsequently have lightning protection professionally installed, 
consisting of a number of lightning rods on the roof all connected inside along 
the ridge line with 00 gauge stranded copper, running to 10 foot ground rods at 
both ends of the house.

This wire runs well above the G5RV in the attic ... far enough to protect it 
and also far enough to 'not' act as a Faraday Cage.

Would another direct strike still cause issues? Possibly, but I feel much more 
secure with that antenna in a storm than the outside EDZ.

73,
Lyn, WØLEN


-----Original Message-----
From: Don Wilhelm [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Saturday, September 14, 2019 8:51 AM
To: [email protected]; 'Elecraft Reflector'
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Rhombic antenna "gain"

Lyn,

Hopefully you do not trust that an antenna in the attic will not be 
susceptible to lightning.
I would not use ANY antenna during a thunderstorm.
Shut down the station and ground all feedlines.

73,
Don W3FPR

On 9/14/2019 8:27 AM, Lyn Norstad wrote:

> 
> Prior to the HOA changes, I was limited to a G5RV Jr. in the attic.  It
> worked fairly well, but nothing like this.  I still use it as a backup
> during thunderstorms when the EDZ is disconnected.

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