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From | To | Subject | Date/Time | |||
Daryl Stout | Ed Koon | First Post! |
January 23, 2016 12:52 PM * |
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Ed, EK>I know that feeling! Back a few years ago i had a lightning bolt take a EK>direct hit to a phone pole in front of our house. Major damage ensued and EK>it EK>didn't help having surge strips and ups. Saw fire shoot out of my cable EK>modem. OUCH! I heard of a fellow ham radio operator who had a similar experience. He had SPARED NO EXPENSE for lightning and surge protection. You name it, he bought it, he installed it...price was no object. Unfortunately, it was no match for a direct or very close strike. His tower, mast, antennas, and coaxial cable were VAPORIZED!! The UPS units, and devices they were protecting were all destroyed. He was lucky his place didn't burn down. Lightning dances around my apartment like an ungrounded Faraday cage during storms. One time, the strike hit the tree next to the southwest side of the building. A kink in the wiring of my alarm system screwed it up (it has since been fixed), but I had everything else (except for the refrigerator/freezer, stove, and dishwasher) unplugged. The aforementioned appliances are part of the apartment, so I wouldn't be responsible for replacing them. However, people in my building (there are 4 apartments per building), as well as adjacent buildings, were taking electronic appliances of every sort (radios, TV's, VCR's, DVD's, microwave ovens, computers, stereos, home entertainment systems, etc.) by the truckload out to the dumpster. The surge had spread out so far that I'd say everything within a half mile was vulnerable. Besides, each lightning bolt: 1) Is 50,000 degrees Fahrenheit (5 times hotter than the sun's surface) 2) Has 300,000 volts and 30,000 amps of electricity 3) Can strike as much as 20 miles from the parent storm (bolt from the blue) I'm a 2 time lightning strike survivor (indirect, but close enough that I got the shock)...however, I carry no electrical charge, and can be handled safely. <G> I'd rather be offline a few hours or days, rather than permanently from a lightning strike. The Storm Prediction Center requires at least a 10% coverage of thunderstorms to have the area noted on their severe weather outlooks, and all it takes is one rogue strike to destroy everything. Daryl --- * OLX 1.53 * Are dog biscuits made from collie flour? * PDQWK 2.53 #5 --- GTMail 1.26 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - wx1der.dyndns.org - GT Power 20 (1:19/33.0) |
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