At 01:40 pm 06/01/2006 +1100, you wrote:
>In reply to  Grimer's message of Wed, 04 Jan 2006 04:06:22 +0000:
>Hi,
>[snip]
>>At 09:58 pm 03/01/2006 -0500, hohlraum wrote:
>>
>>> Did any ever get struck by Thor?
>>
>>
>>
>>I never heard of a case. 
>>
>>Lighting doesn't bring down aeroplanes very often. 
>>Why should it bring down balloons?
>>
>>Frank
>It may not bring the balloon down, but of necessity, the cable
>must be conducting. Therefore lightning strikes are going to fry
>the power connections on the ground.
>
>Regards,
>
>Robin van Spaandonk


Be an extra source of power then, wont it.  8-)

Joking apart. I'm sure the developers 
are not complete idiots and have thought 
of that one. 

Doubtless you could think of many ways of 
combating the problem yourself. Presumably 
if one was measuring the potential between 
the balloon and the ground one would get 
an early warning and could react in some 
way or other.

At the very least you could isolate the 
ground apparatus from the balloon till the
danger was over.

During the war barrage balloons were tethered
by steel cables. Steel is a good conductor
yet I never heard of a balloon being brought
down by lightning and I never noticed the 
aroma of frying ground-crew.  ;-)

Frank



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