[Rhodes22-list] sailing and lightning
William E. Wickman
wewickman at duke-energy.com
Mon Jul 31 11:14:00 EDT 2006
When I was in high school, a friend's brother died when lightening struck
his car. He was lying underneath working on it. He probably had a wrench
touching the engine when it happened. A very tragic freak accident.
Bill Wickman
Bill Effros
<bill at effros.com>
Sent by: To
rhodes22-list-bou The Rhodes 22 mail list
nces at rhodes22.org <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org>
cc
07/30/2006 09:54 Subject
AM Re: [Rhodes22-list] sailing and
lightning
Please respond to
The Rhodes 22
mail list
<rhodes22-list at rh
odes22.org>
Has anyone ever seen a car struck by lightning?
Is anyone planning to ground their cars?
It seems to me tanker trucks used to drag chains, but I don't see that
much any more. Wonder why.
Bill Effros
Todd Tavares wrote:
> Bill E. wrote:
>
> "Since our masts do not go down into the water, it would seem
> difficult for lightning to jump to a ground if you don't provide it."
>
> Sorry to pick on you Bill, but if lightning can arc 1000ft between the
> earth or water and the clouds, what makes you think it wouldn't jump that
> last (or first) five feet from your mast or shroud to the water? There
> you go again making statements without first doing the research....we
> didn't even get a dead-end link to follow. ;-D Murphy's Law of
> lightning says that as soon as you say you would never get struck by
> lightning, that's when you get hit.
>
> Todd T.
>
> (joking of course)
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Bill Effros"
> To: "The Rhodes 22 mail list"
> Subject: Re: [Rhodes22-list] sailing and lightning
> Date: Fri, 28 Jul 2006 21:20:18 -0400
>
>
> Ed,
>
> I think Rummy has had the most to say on this one, although I agree
> with what he has said.
>
> It boils down to "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." It seems to us
> that grounding your boat provides lightning with a better path.
> Since our masts do not go down into the water, it would seem
> difficult for lightning to jump to a ground if you don't provide it.
>
> Our thought is that when you hear lightning you should hang out
> around boats with taller masts that are more likely to be struck.
> We think the last thing you want to do when you see or hear
> lightning is grab hold of a grounding plate and throw it into the
> water. The last thing you may hear is "Wow! Did you see that one?"
>
> Bill Effros
>
> Tootle wrote:
> > Where did it go?
> >
> > Where is that question I posted?
> >
> > Here is what started the question:
> >
> > http://www.cdc.gov/nasd/docs/d000001-d000100/d000007/d000007.html
> >
> > It say you should ground your mast. But it does tell me how to
> ground the
> > mast that I can figure out. So how do you ground a sail boat??
> >
> > Bill Effros, you are the expert on this subject, aren't you?
> >
> > So how do you ground a sail boat? John Lock, you are the current
> > research expert. What is the correct answer?
> >
> > Ed K
> > Greenville, SC, USA
> >
> __________________________________________________
> Use Rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org, Help? www.rhodes22.org/list
>
>
__________________________________________________
Use Rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org, Help? www.rhodes22.org/list
More information about the Rhodes22-list
mailing list