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Lightning strike yesterday evening...

http://www.swsports.org/images/Movies/strike.wmv

Sorry for the little wobble - I still can't figure out how to use that
stabilization thing - I know, I'm a putz.
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"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
...
Lightning strike yesterday evening...

http://www.swsports.org/images/Movies/strike.wmv

Sorry for the little wobble - I still can't figure out how to use that
stabilization thing - I know, I'm a putz.


Were those separate strikes? They look Identical.

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On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 10:06:11 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

Lightning strike yesterday evening...

http://www.swsports.org/images/Movies/strike.wmv

Sorry for the little wobble - I still can't figure out how to use that
stabilization thing - I know, I'm a putz.


Any idea what it was hitting? Looked like it must have been very attractive
to the lightening.

There is bound to be an amount of movement beyond which stabilization will
have no effect. Being caught in gusts of wind may just be more than
stabilization can handle.

What model camera did you get? Better yet, just post a URL to a site.
--
John *H*
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Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
Lightning strike yesterday evening...

http://www.swsports.org/images/Movies/strike.wmv

Sorry for the little wobble - I still can't figure out how to use that
stabilization thing - I know, I'm a putz.



If you lived in a more civilized part of the Nutmeg State, you'd know
the difference between "klutz" and "putz." :)
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On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 06:19:28 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
.. .
Lightning strike yesterday evening...

http://www.swsports.org/images/Movies/strike.wmv

Sorry for the little wobble - I still can't figure out how to use that
stabilization thing - I know, I'm a putz.


Were those separate strikes? They look Identical.


I wondered about that myself as I'm not an expert on lightning strikes
even though for about 12 years I had three tall towers in the back
yard. I was only an expert on preventing damage and repairing damage
I couldn't prevent. :)

So I emailed one of my old friends who is a professor of meterological
sciences along with the video and he replied:

"It's called a secondary strike which can repeat the main strike as
many as 40 times. The time delay can be variable from nanoseconds to
miliseconds between the strikes. It's one of those things we were
discussing the other day about "optical delusions" as the secondary
strikes will occur even when the main flash is still visible - you got
lucky in that one of the secondary strikes is in the millisecond
category. I'll bet you anything it hit the old Fern's tower over on
W. Quassett Road right?

You also got lucky with the ionization flare - notice that little tiny
thin flash at the start of the strike? That was the ionization trail
and from the looks of it, it started at the lake."

He was right which is why I aimed the camera in that direction because
that tower is like a freakin' lightning magnet.

Learn something new everyday although I think he mentioned it once in
a lecture of his I attended - I just forgot.

So it's the same as learning something new. :)


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On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 06:33:10 -0400, John H.
wrote:

On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 10:06:11 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

Lightning strike yesterday evening...

http://www.swsports.org/images/Movies/strike.wmv

Sorry for the little wobble - I still can't figure out how to use that
stabilization thing - I know, I'm a putz.


Any idea what it was hitting? Looked like it must have been very attractive
to the lightening.


Old communications tower about a 1/2 mile West of me across the lake.

There is bound to be an amount of movement beyond which stabilization will
have no effect. Being caught in gusts of wind may just be more than
stabilization can handle.


Actually, I figured it out this morning.

Of course reading the manual helped. :)

What model camera did you get? Better yet, just post a URL to a site.


Canon Vixia HV20

http://www.usa.canon.com/consumer/co...odeli d=14869
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On Jun 17, 11:55*am, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:
On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 06:19:28 -0400, "Jim" wrote:

"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
.. .
Lightning strike yesterday evening...


http://www.swsports.org/images/Movies/strike.wmv


Sorry for the little wobble - I still can't figure out how to use that
stabilization thing - I know, I'm a putz.


Were those separate strikes? They look Identical.


I wondered about that myself as I'm not an expert on lightning strikes
even though for about 12 years I had three tall towers in the back
yard. *I was only an expert on preventing damage and repairing damage
I couldn't prevent. *:)

So I emailed one of my old friends who is a professor of meterological
sciences along with the video and he replied:

"It's called a secondary strike which can repeat the main strike as
many as 40 times. The time delay can be variable from nanoseconds to
miliseconds between the strikes. *It's one of those things we were
discussing the other day about "optical delusions" as the secondary
strikes will occur even when the main flash is still visible - you got
lucky in that one of the secondary strikes is in the millisecond
category. *I'll bet you anything it hit the old Fern's tower over on
W. Quassett Road right?

You also got lucky with the ionization flare - notice that little tiny
thin flash at the start of the strike? *That was the ionization trail
and from the looks of it, it started at the lake."

He was right which is why I aimed the camera in that direction because
that tower is like a freakin' lightning magnet.

Learn something new everyday although I think he mentioned it once in
a lecture of his I attended - I just forgot.

So it's the same as learning something new. *:)


Simply put:

Cloud-to-ground lightning (CG's)
A channel of negative charge, called a step leader, will zigzag
downward in roughly 50-yard segments in a forked pattern. This step
leader is invisible to the human eye, and shoots to the ground in less
time than it takes to blink. As it nears the ground, the negatively
charged step leader is attracted to a channel of positive charge
reaching up, a streamer, normally through something tall, such as a
tree, house, or telephone pole. When the oppositely-charged leader and
streamer connect, a powerful electrical current begins flowing. A
return stroke of bright luminosity travels about 60,000 miles per
second back towards the cloud. A flash consists of one or perhaps as
many as 20 return strokes. We see lightning flicker when the process
rapidly repeats itself several times along the same path. The actual
diameter of a lightning channel is one-to two inches
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On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 15:59:10 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 06:33:10 -0400, John H.
wrote:

On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 10:06:11 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

Lightning strike yesterday evening...

http://www.swsports.org/images/Movies/strike.wmv

Sorry for the little wobble - I still can't figure out how to use that
stabilization thing - I know, I'm a putz.


Any idea what it was hitting? Looked like it must have been very attractive
to the lightening.


Old communications tower about a 1/2 mile West of me across the lake.

There is bound to be an amount of movement beyond which stabilization will
have no effect. Being caught in gusts of wind may just be more than
stabilization can handle.


Actually, I figured it out this morning.

Of course reading the manual helped. :)

What model camera did you get? Better yet, just post a URL to a site.


Canon Vixia HV20

http://www.usa.canon.com/consumer/co...odeli d=14869


Cool. Thanks.
--
John *H*
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wrote in message
...
On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 10:06:11 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

Lightning strike yesterday evening...

http://www.swsports.org/images/Movies/strike.wmv

Sorry for the little wobble - I still can't figure out how to use that
stabilization thing - I know, I'm a putz.


I took a direct hit on my lightnig rod on the garage the day before we
went on vacation (2 weeks ago)
The Mexican who had been working in the yard about ****ed his pants.
He was plastered against the garage door, not moving. I was out in the
yard when it hit but this was the second direct strike I have seen
there in a year so I wasn't all that "shocked"
It did blow the serial port on my weather station again. I guess I
will have to work on that problem. It seems to be a pattern. ;-)


wow , be careful something is attracting and acting like a lightning rod.
if you do not have one you might want to put one up


--
Boat Auctions
http://sailirc.net/boats/index.php


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Jim Jim is offline
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wrote in message
...
On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 10:06:11 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

Lightning strike yesterday evening...

http://www.swsports.org/images/Movies/strike.wmv

Sorry for the little wobble - I still can't figure out how to use that
stabilization thing - I know, I'm a putz.


I took a direct hit on my lightnig rod on the garage the day before we
went on vacation (2 weeks ago)
The Mexican who had been working in the yard about ****ed his pants.
He was plastered against the garage door, not moving. I was out in the
yard when it hit but this was the second direct strike I have seen
there in a year so I wasn't all that "shocked"
It did blow the serial port on my weather station again. I guess I
will have to work on that problem. It seems to be a pattern. ;-)


There's proof positive that lightning rods attract lightning.I might put one
up, but not on the house. I'm thinking of putting it on the the top of a
flagpole, as far from the house as possible. A flagpole has been on my
agenda anyway.

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