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#1
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How about this?
http://home.maine.rr.com/rlma/Ground.jpg I hauled out 180 feet of chain and removed my bilge storm chain locker for a better look and measurements. This is close to scale. The ground is shown in red. This would be about two square feet of 1/16" copper glued to the hull and screwed in way of the ballast fill. A 1/2" diameter silicon bronze bolt would go through the copper and hull. This is the same cross section area as the stainless steel mast stanchion. The connection between the mast stanchion and the through bolt would be a 1/8" copper bracket with bent flanges for resistance to the mechanical forces of the charge. This would be machine screwed to the pipe stanchion from the back. A refinement would be to make the through bolt longer and fasten it to the side of the bracket with through bolts for a more straight line electrical path. -- Roger Long |
#2
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Roger Long wrote:
How about this? http://home.maine.rr.com/rlma/Ground.jpg I hauled out 180 feet of chain and removed my bilge storm chain locker for a better look and measurements. This is close to scale. The ground is shown in red. This would be about two square feet of 1/16" copper glued to the hull and screwed in way of the ballast fill. A 1/2" diameter silicon bronze bolt would go through the copper and hull. This is the same cross section area as the stainless steel mast stanchion. The connection between the mast stanchion and the through bolt would be a 1/8" copper bracket with bent flanges for resistance to the mechanical forces of the charge. This would be machine screwed to the pipe stanchion from the back. A refinement would be to make the through bolt longer and fasten it to the side of the bracket with through bolts for a more straight line electrical path. Doesn't look too bad, definately better than leaving it alone. As I mentioned previously, this is much like a HF grounding problem (except a DC path is required and the expected current level. That would lead me to suspect that multiple bolts between the copper bracket and the grounding plate would be in order. Take full width copper plates bolted on fore and aft of the support strut out to ground plates port and starboard. If you can persuade the current to split fairly evenly you gain *much* more protection from explosive events round those 1/2" through hull bolts as resistive heating will be proportional to I^2. If you manage to split the current evenly between four bolts, two each side, the energy dissipated in each bolt will be reduced by a factor of 16. I wouldnt bother with the longer bolts bent and bolted to the bracket, You'd be better off with triangular pieces brazed accross the corner of the bracket to its flange either side of each bolt, leaving just enough room to get the end of a spanner in. If everything is nicely faired in and you round off all sharp edges to the largest radius possible you should have minimal structural and underwater damage. There is likely to be at least *some* moisture behind the exterior grounding plates so I would expect a steam explosion especially at their edges. Screwing them into the ballast keel is probably not a good idea. Drill and countersink holes in the plates *ONLY* to provide a key and epoxy them into place? They will probably come loose at the edges in a strike but hopefully will remain connected at the through bolts. If you can keep the encapsulated ballast from being involved, you've basically won. Have you considerd that the odds are that you *WONT* have a startable engine unless you can either hand start it or have a spare starting battery kept fully isolated and a spare starter motor. Also you will probably have damage to control cables and possibly to any metal fuel lines depending on their proximity to other items. I've seen photos of lightning damage to a mast with multiple holes you could stick several fingers through down it for about a quarter of its length so rig failure is also a real possibility. |
#3
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"Roger Long" wrote in
: The mast stanchion is essentially equal to a keel stepped mast. Since my boat was originally a keel / centerboarder, the keel is large volume and I doubt that Endeavour spent the money for a keel casting. I'm quite sure the ballast is just stacked lead pigs in resin. Lighting current going through that stuff would be like a bomb and the high resistance at the bottom of the main conductor would create extensive side flashing. For reasons not evident on the crude drawing, any grounding plates have to be outboard of the cabin sole. The Thomson paper says not to let grounding conductors contact the hull but I have no choice if I am to maintain the maximum radius recommended by other sources. The reason for overkill on conductor and ground plate size is to compensate for the tight conductor radius and need to run the conductors close to the hull skin. -- Roger Long I've been involved in tower grounding (just a mast 1200' high with no sails, if we can help it) for decades in broadcasting. The AM towers are series fed, meaning they are insulated from ground but have two trailer hitch balls a few inches apart (far enough so the 5, 10, 25 or 50KW transmitters don't make them arc in the downpouring rainstorms.) Looking around Jim Hawkins' broadcast transmitter website, you can learn a lot about lightning grounding from the professionals: http://www.hawkins.pair.com/radio.html Let's look at the feedpoint of WFAN/WCBS AM stations whos twin 50,000 watt transmitters across the river from NYC share one tower. (The RF comes out of the building on that copper tubing with the rain loop in it.) The 900', i think, tower sits on a large brown ceramic insulator. The ring around the outside of the insulator has a lightning gap to that metal ball hooked to the ground plate on top of the concrete base. radiating out from the base are large copper ground straps that hook to another ring, to distribute the hundreds of thousand of amps of current from the stroke, and there is a ring of ground rods driven to bed rock with a pile driver around that ring, the ring attached to the top of them. The key to these grounding systems is their SHORT, STRAIGHT AS POSSIBLE, LOW IMPEDANCE path. Lightning is not considered DC in these designs. It is a PULSE of power with an amazing bandwidth in frequencies. The length of the conductors increases INDUCTANCE, which raises the impedance to the very quick pulse. Impedance is our enemy. As it rises, so does the voltage drop across it, raising the voltage on the upper end of it. Any sharp corners MUST be avoided as that makes a little 1 turn COIL raising impedance to the pulse. Ground strap must CURVE around a large radius, as discussed in the article, to reduce impedance and pulse voltage drop. By the way, most big AM stations use the Harris DX-50 solid state 50KW transmitters now. They use 55KW of power from the power company to put out 50KW of RF to the antenna...This is one of the 230 switching modules that actually provide the RF power: http://www.hawkins.pair.com/wabcnow/wabcn14.jpg All the cooling it needs is a few big muffin fans through those little heat sinks to put out a blowtorch of AM radio power! Amazing technology. If you wanna see more, look he http://www.hawkins.pair.com/wcbs_wfan.html Most people have no idea where the signal comes from. They think it comes from the studio where the stupid talking heads live. http://www.hawkins.pair.com/wado/wadotowrleg.jpg Here's a similar base at WADO, formerly WNEW. It has two lightning balls across the massive insulator. The odd looking intertwined rings are called Austin transformers. The RF won't flow between the rings because they are far apart and provide fairly good isolation. What DOES go across between these coils is 60 cycle AC power, magnetically coupled, that light the tower lights you see day and night for those folks riding to their deaths in airliners. See all the direct, large ground straps heliarc welded to the ground system under the tower? Low impedance...low voltage....only a few hundred volts of pulse in a stroke to this huge tower. http://www.hawkins.pair.com/wor/wor_tower08.jpg This picture of the base of WOR's towers shows "Johnny Bells" and the lightning balls to ground. Lightning flows out to the edge of the bells then jumps the gap to the balls. ================================================== ================= Your only hope is to BYPASS the lightning's current AROUND the passengers and hull so it doesn't HAVE to jump THRU it, punching holes in the expensive plastique. There are many "paths" to get the lightning off the mast. The base of the mast must be connected to the sea as short and direct as possible. From the above pictures, you can see how big the conductor SHOULD be, but that's not very practical in most boats. Keel stepped masts are easy. Copper straps to the inside of the hull clamped between large stainless washers and 2 nuts where the grounding block mounting bolts come through the hull. Coat it all in your favorite sealant, but make sure you leave it where the sealant can be shed so the grounding blocks can be replaced as they eventually will be eaten. I guess it's too ugly to expect painted straps down the OUTSIDE of the hull to the same bolts UNDER the grounding blocks from the lower end of the shrouds, another great path from mast to sea around the people, hull and expensive electronics. Backstay and Forestay ends also need grounding blocks underwater to bleed off the charge around the ends of it. Just dreaming....I've been knocked flat being between the backstay and steering wheel in the way of lightning arcing between them. You'll never forget it......so close. |
#4
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On Mon, 10 Nov 2008 04:03:50 +0000, Larry wrote:
Let's look at the feedpoint of WFAN/WCBS AM stations whos twin 50,000 watt transmitters across the river from NYC share one tower. (The RF comes out of the building on that copper tubing with the rain loop in it.) The WCBS/WFAN transmitters and tower are actually in New York City, albeit the far north eastern corner, just south of mainland Bronx and right on the edge of Western Long Island Sound. We moored our first keel boat a few hundred yards from there after we bought it in 1971. http://www.hawkins.pair.com/wcbs_wfan.html Lat 40-51.589 Lon 73-47.126 You can see the tower and guy wires if you zoom way in with Google Earth. Zoom back out and you can see the small bridge connecting High Island with the north end of City Island. |
#5
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Wayne.B wrote in
: On Mon, 10 Nov 2008 04:03:50 +0000, Larry wrote: Let's look at the feedpoint of WFAN/WCBS AM stations whos twin 50,000 watt transmitters across the river from NYC share one tower. (The RF comes out of the building on that copper tubing with the rain loop in it.) The WCBS/WFAN transmitters and tower are actually in New York City, albeit the far north eastern corner, just south of mainland Bronx and right on the edge of Western Long Island Sound. We moored our first keel boat a few hundred yards from there after we bought it in 1971. http://www.hawkins.pair.com/wcbs_wfan.html Lat 40-51.589 Lon 73-47.126 You can see the tower and guy wires if you zoom way in with Google Earth. Zoom back out and you can see the small bridge connecting High Island with the north end of City Island. You should be able to put a large loopstick up on deck tuned to either station, put it to a rectifier and recharge the boat...(c; I know a ham who lives off the end of the old WKBW 1520Khz 3-tower directional array in Hamburg, NY. There's a big open loopstick tuned circuit in his attic that has powered the yard lights, his garage lights and a couple of incandescents in the hallway for years. They all run 24/7 because if you turn one of them off, the impedance of the load changes and blows all the other bulbs in the array....If one bulb blows, they all blow....too funny. If you have tooth fillings made with metal amalgams, you get to listen to WWKB talk radio, these days, 24/7 with no radio at all.. And they told me RF radiation was dangerous to my health. My ham buddy is 82 this year. He glows a little green in a darkened room, but other than that he's fine....(c;] PS - You adjust the loopstick's parallel tuning capacitor in and out of partial resonance like a light dimmer to get the brightness you want. Free power, just like Nikola Tesla envisioned. |
#6
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Larry wrote:
I've been involved in tower grounding (just a mast 1200' high with no sails, if we can help it) for decades in broadcasting. The AM towers are series fed, meaning they are insulated from ground but have two trailer hitch balls a few inches apart (far enough so the 5, 10, 25 or 50KW transmitters don't make them arc in the downpouring rainstorms.) Looking around Jim Hawkins' broadcast transmitter website, you can learn a lot about lightning grounding from the professionals: http://www.hawkins.pair.com/radio.html Thanks for the cool links Larry. The most dangerous job in America is that held by the tower jockeys. The impedance thing is the biggest factor, you ever think to calculate the slew rate of a lightening pulse? Something like 50MV/uSec! "Resistance is futile, but impedance is rather complex" Cheers Martin |
#7
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![]() Just a thought, has anyone looked at a faraday cage? http://www.juliantrubin.com/bigten/f...periments.html |
#8
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Roger Long wrote:
This winter's major project is to add some serious lightning protection to "Strider". What I have now is probably sufficient to increase the odds of being alive to climb into the dinghy and watch the boat sink but I'd prefer to sail home. It's not a subject that comes up often for a designer of metal vessels so I've been look around the web and learned: The ABYS standards of 1 sq. foot of ground area and 8 GA conductors are marginal and highly suspect. Probably nothing feasible is going to protect a plastic boat in fresh water. Although I'm generally in salt, I'd like to be ready to go up some rivers. Conductors should have a minimum 8" radius bend. I've got a metal mast support strut that has sufficient through bolts to the mast deck step to make it electrically continuous. This lands on a wide, internal ballast keel. I plan to run flat copper straps about 1/16" x 1/2" (approximate cross section of 4 ga wire) from this up each side to 6" x 24" bronze ground plates on each side of the hull. These will be about 1/16" thick and through bolted to the hull at each corner. Inside, there will be straps under the bolt heads in an "X" pattern with the strap from the mast strut lead to the center. There will also be a 4 Ga wire or strap from the engine block to one of these plates to help protect the engine bearings. Comments welcome on this conceptual plan which will also include other secondary bonding additions as recommended by ABYC. Here's my main question for someone who understands high voltage better than I do: I only have 6" under the cabin sole. How critical is the 8" bend? Can I compensate for the tighter radius by increasing the conductor cross section? How much? The turn is more than 90 degrees because the straps have to run back up the hull deadrise about two feet to where I can locate the plates and through bolts. I don't think putting the plates on the keel sides is feasible. Another question: Is the standard metal rod VHF antenna at the top of the mast with the typical metal can on a bracket riveted to the mast a sufficient air terminal or should I add a dedicated rod? I have no illusions about having any electronics working after a strike on a 32 foot boat but replacement of my minimalist outfit wouldn't break me financially. I'd just like to be alive with a working engine and watertight boat. Roger, I believe your question is: I only have 6" under the cabin sole. How critical is the 8" bend? Can I compensate for the tighter radius by increasing the conductor cross section? How much? The turn is more than 90 degrees because the straps have to run back up the hull deadrise about two feet to where I can locate the plates and through bolts. I don't think putting the plates on the keel sides is feasible. The bend is pretty critical. By making a turn you create part of a transformer otherwise known as impedance or the resistance to an alternating voltage. The tighter the bend the higher the impedance. Also the higher the frequency the higher the impedance. Since a lighting strike typically has very high energy, high impedance components you are well advised to make the radius as smooth as possible. Paralleling the run may help or may not. Without doing much more research I can't tell. The problem would be if the two runs create a field that would counteract the flow in the opposing wire thus again increasing the impedance. Larger wire helps but maybe not as much as you would think. At high frequencies the current only runs on the outside of the wire in something known as "skin effect." That is why they recommend braided wire, much more surface area. BTW skin effect is caused by the parallel paths in a wire from one side to the other, so you see that it can occur in even small wires. At radar frequencies they use hollow wires known as waveguide. I have seen waveguide melted because of resistance heating due to a small dent that caused some local impedance. Probably not the answer you were hoping for. Sorry. |
#9
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![]() Roger Long schrieb: I only have 6" under the cabin sole. How critical is the 8" bend? Can I compensate for the tighter radius by increasing the conductor cross section? How much? The turn is more than 90 degrees because the straps have to run back up the hull deadrise about two feet to where I can locate the plates and through bolts. I don't think putting the plates on the keel sides is feasible. Hello, the problem with the bends of the conductors is when the bend is to tight, the lightning current will not follow the bend, it will leave the conductor an flash thru the air in a direct line to the next best earth point. Increasing the cross section does not help, you only can connect more of these bends in parallel. Bye |
#10
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On 2008-11-08 12:40:47 -0500, "Roger Long" said:
This winter's major project is to add some serious lightning protection to "Strider". Nothing in this thread I can really tag into well.... Our surveyor was struck. He and boat were saved by an alert bridge tender. As a result, surveyor joined ABYC and helped formulate the guidelines. From what I gleaned from him and other sources, I want to give a chance for the charge to bleed to ground from the mast/stays, but if we are hit, I want the lightning to stay OUTSIDE the boat. At the moment, I only have the original charge-dissipation cables from stays to bolts to our iron keel, a not-bad conductor, particularly as it's got several square meters of surface. But if I cruise towards any lightning-prone areas, I'll bulldog-clamp big copper cables to the base of all stays, bolt zinc guppies to the end (can never have too much zinc ;-) They'll be on deck as we move, but dropped overboard when we stop or see a storm coming through. I've seen too many "lightning arrestor" equipped boats, some installed by the factory guys, get struck amidst "non-protected" boats with higher masts. In other words..... No, no, No, NO, *NO*! Find something to occupy those idle hands that will likely add positive survival probability. -- Jere Lull Xan-à-Deux -- Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD Xan's pages: http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/ Our BVI trips & tips: http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
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