Our family house a mile up the hill, and my radio shack, has lightning rods. I've been in buildings with lightning rods two or three times when they were struck by lightning. Nothing inside was harmed, but the noise was incredible.

What I don't know is the relation between radio and other electronic equipment and a lightning rod installation. For example, do you bond the radio grounds to the lightning rod grounds? At ground level, or anywhere along the wire?

Too bad I can't find my copy of N0AX's book on the subject. Need to do more digging.

73 Bill AE6JV

On 8/17/20 at 7:59 AM, [email protected] (Lyn Norstad) wrote:

FWIW, I have never had lightning come in on power, phone, cable or anything
else like that.  All our services are underground for miles prior to
reaching our house, and that probably helps.

We DID have a direct lightning strike on the house several years ago.  It
struck an attic fan on the roof and followed the electrical wiring to the
boxes in the basement, branching out wherever it could and knocking out the
whole electrical system.  In the process, as it blew up boxes and panels, it
blew out a chunk of PVC carrying water from the well into the pressure tank.
And it blew the tank.

It also started a small fire in the attic (insulation), but that didn't do
too much since the large hole in the roof allowed rain to come in for about
5 hours before we returned home from work. The rain, however, caused
sheet-rocked ceilings (especially over the two-story foyer) to sag.  And of
course with no power, the sump pump was out and the basement flooded (to a
depth of about 6 inches until I could run a line from the neighbor's house).

The EMP (or something ...) was apparently strong enough to even knock out
wall clocks that were battery operated.  At our Fire Dept. station (about 2
miles away), the Chief said it sounded like a bomb went off.  We were 30
miles away at the time, but our two little kitties were in the basement and
when I let them out 5 hours later, their fur was still standing on end.

So this is a problem when living in the country where houses are far apart,
there are no power lines to "catch" the lightning and the only physical
connection into the ground of any significance is a PVC pipe going to the
well (which was also blown out thru the wiring).  The lightning actually
exited the house on the natural gas line. The damage was extensive, and we
had to evacuate for 5 weeks.  It was another 4 months or so before
everything was completed (we did some upgrades in the process). Since then,
I have had a lightning protection system professionally installed under the
direction of an engineer who guesstimated our strike at 50,000 amps.

I had no antennas of any sort at the time, but I do now and have protected
it as best I know (see box on QRZ page).
----------------------------------------------------
Bill Frantz        | Art is how we decorate space,
408-348-7900       | music is how we decorate time.
www.pwpconsult.com |          -Jean-Michel Basquiat

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