by Dolphin » Fri Jul 13, 2012 11:54 pm
Yes Brad, Good question considering summer is a way off.
Felicite suffered during a summer of reasonably high lightning activity.
There are three types of lightning strike, a direct hit, leaders and induction strikes.
The direct hit is what you experienced and you're really lucky if you survive it.
THe second type, a leader is the precurser to a direct hit. It's where a corona is started from any object and the air is starting to break down electrically. You can sometimes see it as a pinkish line just before the lightning follows it to the ground. The cricketers were lucky but the wrong strategy. If it was dark you may have seen the corona or leaders coming from sharp objects. It usually appears well before the rain starts, as the Anvil head of the storm cloud passes over, it has the highest electrical stress. Usually you can see peoples hair start to stand up, that is the time to hit the deck. Laying in the ground is the most dangerous thing to do. If lightning hits nearby, the voltage drop through the ground is high and can be enough to kill you. You should crouch down with your feet together.
The third type is an induction strike. The current in the lightning can be 10,000 amps and it rises in 1.5 microseconds and decays relatively slowly in about 50 microseconds. This induces large voltages in ANY metal objects and wiring nearby. You don't actually have to be hit by the lightning for it to cause damage.
Felicite suffered damage from I think an induction strike. The Log, an Autohelm ST50 instrument started to do wierd things after one of the storms. As the votage of the battery charged up, the meter would go into alarm, give wierd readings etc. It was traced back to the 5 Volt regulator that had broken down and was allowing 12 V to the 5V system. Other instruments started to play up after that too. THe induction strike can blow away sections of the semiconductor and render the junction incapable of carrying the current. Sometime 50V is all it takes at the semiconductor. Electronic equipment may fail months after a strike.
A boat was hit in Burraneer bay and sunk as the lightning went all the way through the wiring and blew the depth sounder transducer to bits and sunk the boat.
Some friend were returning to Sydney from Lord Howe Is and they suffered a direct hit on the mast head. They saw the flash but didn't hear any sound. They lost instruments and the alternator. That was on a Roberts Spray called "Florescent".
In Europe there are 10 people killed per year on boats.
When there are storms around, I put a piece of chain from the bottom of the cap shroud and drop it into the water. It might save the lightning tracking across the deck and burning it. The safest place to be in an electrical storm is in a car. The body acts as a Faraday Shield.
Nothing will stop a direct strike.
Hope it helps.
Greg
Felicite Mk III
Lake Macquarie
"After it's all said and done, there is a lot more said than done!" Aesop 620 BC