jeremyshaw
Well-Known Member
Two interesting things strike me about this lightning strike report I got from friends in the US yesterday. Here's the report:
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best of all, we managed to dodge some really bad thunderstorms - 2” hail, 70 knots of wind, until, the day after we were hauled at Tidewater in Port Covington, Baltimore, when our luck ran out and we took a direct lightning hit to the top of the mast. God must have been really mad that day as a 140 year old church was also hit and burned to the ground. We are fortunate to be able to tell the tale as we were on board when the lightning struck with a blinding flash and very loud bang. It blew the VHF antenna and the masthead tricolor light to smithereens; killed all the electronics which weren’t por table or small enough to fit in the stove (our improvised Faraday cage); scorched the genoa and welded the furler blade; and another nasty surprise awaited when the storm passed and we went off the boat, there was a hole in the starboard bow and a crater in the ground below.
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The interesting things are:
1. It shows the Faraday cage idea of putting stuff in the oven really works, even with a major strike like this. I've always done it, but more in faith than certainty.
2. I'm curious as to whether the hole in the bow would have got blown if she had been in the water. This boat is a cat so would likely have been on wooden blocks with just a couple of front and back support props on each hull. I suspect the lightning was unable to ground easily and therefore went through the hull to take the shortest path.
Any views on whether this boat, if in the water in this situation, would have still got a hole in the hull? I think not but I can't really argue the case well...
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best of all, we managed to dodge some really bad thunderstorms - 2” hail, 70 knots of wind, until, the day after we were hauled at Tidewater in Port Covington, Baltimore, when our luck ran out and we took a direct lightning hit to the top of the mast. God must have been really mad that day as a 140 year old church was also hit and burned to the ground. We are fortunate to be able to tell the tale as we were on board when the lightning struck with a blinding flash and very loud bang. It blew the VHF antenna and the masthead tricolor light to smithereens; killed all the electronics which weren’t por table or small enough to fit in the stove (our improvised Faraday cage); scorched the genoa and welded the furler blade; and another nasty surprise awaited when the storm passed and we went off the boat, there was a hole in the starboard bow and a crater in the ground below.
========================
The interesting things are:
1. It shows the Faraday cage idea of putting stuff in the oven really works, even with a major strike like this. I've always done it, but more in faith than certainty.
2. I'm curious as to whether the hole in the bow would have got blown if she had been in the water. This boat is a cat so would likely have been on wooden blocks with just a couple of front and back support props on each hull. I suspect the lightning was unable to ground easily and therefore went through the hull to take the shortest path.
Any views on whether this boat, if in the water in this situation, would have still got a hole in the hull? I think not but I can't really argue the case well...