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Jere Lull wrote:
No, no, No, NO, *NO*! Find something to occupy those idle hands that will likely add positive survival probability. The thing I've learned in this very interesting thread on via Google is that lightning will follow every path; not just the path of least resistance. There is so much current that even a small fraction can do enormous damage. When it gets to the end of an ungrounded conductor, it's going to go somewhere. The approach of leading it down the stays might work with a non-conductive mast that didn't have any wiring in it but, as Ian points out, when the largest conductor on the boat just ends either right above the heads of people huddled inside (in the case of a non-conductive support pillar) or at a non-grounded keel, bad things are going to happen. There seems to be an inconsistency in the historical fear level of marine lightning and current statistics. I suspect this is due to two main reasons. First, up until about 40 years ago, the typical vessel had a wooden mast with outside chainplates that lead near the waterline. This is far from effective protection but may actually be as good as can be obtained with secondary grounding of a metal mast. Second, boating in Florida and other high strike probability areas has become vastly more common in the same time period. Most of the strikes I have heard of anecdotally in this part of the world have only resulted in electronics wipe out. I've never heard of a sinking or fatality in a sailboat in New England. Strikes clearly vary in intensity. Some would probably sink a boat with a 4" diameter solid copper conductor running to 50 square feet of ground plate. There is a huge probability factor at work here. The Sea Grant study http://www.thomson.ece.ufl.edu/lightning/ showed that 75% of Florida boats struck in salt water suffered no hull damage, and less than 10% had watertight integrity breaches, a large proportion of which were survivable. These translate into pretty good odds for a boat operating in northeast waters or only in Florida during the dry season. In view of the difficulties doing anything clearly effective on my boat, I'm now tending towards your quoted statement. There is a big element of "fun for it's own sake" in these projects. I enjoy watching weather and thunderstorms and that enjoyment would be increased by a lower anxiety level about a strike. However, similar money and effort spent on similarly interesting projects would probably increase the overall safety of my boat more than grounding the mast. If lighting wants to go in a straight line to large masses of metal, my mast is probably somewhat grounded anyway. There is a lot of lead down there and the keel is quite wide. Side flash would probably go down into that large mass and spread out below the top of the encapsulation. There would still be major flashes around inside the boat but it sounds like there would be with any expensive and complex grounding plates I added as well. My grounding scheme might well just attract the charge towards the thin part of the hull. Damage down in the encapsulation would probably be major but there would be so many paths that it probably wouldn't result in catastrophic leaks. Leaking would take care of any fire that resulted in the ballast area. A small blood clot in a heart artery is probably an order of magnitude greater in probability than a boat sinking strike in this part of the world so perhaps I should just have two asprin and call back in the morning. -- Roger Long |
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