Glenn writes:
> Any ground length over five feet from equipment to ground rod is almost
> useless for protection from a close lightning strike. It is fine for a
> electrical safety ground, but too much voltage will be imposed on the
> equipment for the equipment to survive fro a close strike.
>
> Hope that this helps.
>
> 73
> Glenn
> WB4UIV
Watching and learning from this thread, I'm beginning to think I should be
operating from a metal dog house with a ring of ground rods directly at the
station equipment (sarcastic). I've got about 6' of ground buss running
behind the operating position. Total distance to the rod is about 6'-7'. I
fail to see how it can get any better than this, short of the metal dog
house approach.
I think what all respondants to this thread are saying is that if you get a
close strike, you are TOAST! Trying to engineer for a direct hit is
impossible with the light gauge metals and structures that are quite flimsy
when compared to a bridge or a sky-scraper.
How about some practical advice for the 90% of hams that cannot possibly
engineer a perfect solution. A second floor shack is TOAST. What should
this guy do to protect his family and possessions? Forget the radio! I'd
expect a sensitive piece of equipment to fry in the presence of a million
volts at a million amps. I would rather have that insured equipment
completely melt down and fry while shunting most of the strike to ground
rather than burn 100% of my worldly possessions.
Ford-N0FP
ford@cmgate.com
|