If you get a direct hit pretty much nothing can save you. Except luck. Because, 
when you are trying to get signals in on the one hand and keep lightning out on 
the other, strange things can happen. 

 
I had a long wire about 100 ft long (outdoor length probably on the order of 80 
ft.) around 10 ft above ground (year about '74 - Carbondale, Illinois). A 
Lafayette Radio Antenna Kit IIRC.  A spark plug lightning arrestor (gapped to 
.010) on the end of an 8ft pipe pounded into the ground and then into the shack 
with a knife switch ground for use  during storms. 

During a storm with every thing in order - knife switch closed - antenna thus 
grounded - I took a direct hit. It caused a 3 ft ball lightning to form inside. 
It was green and moved slowly in my direction as I backed away. I think it 
lasted about a minute but time sense in such situations is not very good so it 
might have been 10 or 20 seconds. Total movement from inception to collapse - 
around 10 ft. No eqpt. was damaged. XMTR was a Johnson Ranger and the RCVR was 
a Hallicrafters. Can't recall the model. It would have been a similar price 
rage for the time - both bought used. 

So ball lightning is real. I found out up close and personal. 

Simon

Engineering is the art of making what you want from what you can get at a 
profit.


Message: 2
Date: Mon, 26 Nov 2012 10:18:34 -0800
From: Mark Spencer <[email protected]>
To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement
    <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Surge Arresters
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain;    charset=us-ascii

I don't use one on my gpsdo feed line.   The shield of the feed line is 
grounded prior to it entering the house and I don't live in a lightning prone 
area.  The gps antenna I use apparently has diode protection to provide some 
immunity to near by lightning strikes.  Most of my radio antennas are dc 
grounded.  I also had a dedicated roof top ground system installed during some 
prior home renovations that the coax shields of my roof top antenna(s) are 
connected to.   This ground system is in turn connected to the electrical 
service ground out side of the house.  I'm hopeful the roof top ground will be 
a more attractive path to ground for lightning than the shields of the feed 
lines that run into the house that are connected to gpsdo's and radios that are 
in turn grounded via the electrical system in the house.

If I see a surge suppressor for a decent price on eBay I might re consider 
getting one, but I'm unsure if it would make much difference in my 
circumstances in the event of a direct hit.   I'm primarily interested in 
protecting the house and it's occupants.   The survival of the radios is a 
fairly low priority to me.

I hope I never get to find out what happens if my roof top antennas get hit by 
lightning.

Regards

Mark Spencer

Sent from my iPad


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