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![]() wrote in message ... On Aug 20, 7:57 pm, Vic Smith wrote: This is the best thing I've seen on lightning, and think it pretty well hits the mark on what you can do on a boat. It's geared toward sailboats, but the principles are there. For electronics gear, I would do the same as I do at home with my computer and other electronic gear if I anticipate lightning: unplug it. An insulated non-conducting case might be appropriate for a radio when at sea.http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/pdffiles/SG/SG07100.pdf --Vic That is a good article. Thanks It is a good article in terms of what happens when you get hit and how to design for a hit. The other school of thought is a design to minimize your chances of getting hit in the first place. Both approaches are not fool proof, as the effects of a hit are not 100% predictable, nor is a system designed to minimize the chances of a hit 100% effective. Personally, having many years of experience in designing vacuum processing equipment that contain controlled plasma discharges, (basically the same as lightning, except it is a sustained and controlled electrical discharge through ionized gas), I am more of a believer in the concept of minimizing the conditions that would lead to a strike in the first place. Ironically, the approach is almost the opposite of trying to design a system to capture the energy of a strike and safely transfer it to ground. Eisboch |
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