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[TowerTalk] porcupines and such

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: [TowerTalk] porcupines and such
From: Didier Juges <didier@cox.net>
Date: Sun, 21 Mar 2004 22:07:49 -0600
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
Bill,

I did not say the charge on the earth was "absolutely" uniform. It is just significantly more uniform than that of the clouds because the earth is considerably more conductive (I did not say earth was a superconductor either) than the clouds, at least until ionisation takes place. Until lightning strikes, currents are very low (if I recall, just before the main discharge, currents are in the low amperes range), so the resistance of the earth (which is measured in ohms, not hundreds of ohms in most cases) has little effect, because potentials developed across the earth by these currents are measured in volts, not kilovolts. Said another way, the probability of lightning is not very dependent on the soil quality (even though a VERY poorly conductive soil may affect the probability by raising soil resistance to 10s of kilo-ohms possibly), but the effects of lightning are. Please note I said IT IS NOT VERY DEPENDANT, I did not say IT IS NOT DEPENDANT.

We certainly have generally conductive soil here in Florida, where it's all soaked with water, some of it being salty water. Yet, we have lots of lightnings.

I am talking about relative effects, not in absolute terms.

Of course the charge in the clouds will attract opposite charge on the ground. Please note I equated the clouds and earth to a capacitor, and this is how capacitors work (I refer you to your favorite electricity 101 book). The point of the posting is that unlike someone said, the porcupines do not dissipate the charge in the earth by an appreciable level. Their only effect is to reduce the charge IN THE AIR around them. Not quite the same thing. I did not say that was useless either, even though my belief is that it is not very useful as a means of avoiding lightning strikes.

The presence of charges is not what causes lightning, it is the POTENTIAL that matters, and how close the potential differential is sufficient to cause ionization. Now, I agree that charges are what causes potential, It would be the same thing as saying spending causes you to loose your credit. It only causes you to loose your credit if you spend in excess of your credit limit.

The charge on earth's side is considerably more uniform than that on the clouds. When was the last time you saw lightning between two points ON EARTH? Compare that to lightning between clouds, which are common.

There again, you should keep things in perspective, as it is all relative.

You can read the rest of the posting now :-)

73,
Didier KO4BB

At 07:29 PM 3/21/2004, you wrote:

Didier- IMHO, your first paragraph has such fundamental errors that the rest cannot be supported. The charge on the earth side is NOT uniform over miles; the earth is not a superconductor and has finite resistance. All common descriptions I have seen showing the charge distributions show both the earth and the clouds with charge, but of opposite sign. This is contrary to your first statement.
Bill


At 12:07 PM 3/21/2004 -0600, you wrote:

The problem is that the ground is not charged, the clouds are charged. Think of the earth and the cloud as both plates of a capacitor, except that the bottom plate is a few 10 of thousands of miles long and conductive, and the top plate (the cloud) is a few thousand feet wide, and basically a charged insulator (each water droplet is charged, but isolated from its neighbor. The charge on the earth side is for all practical purposes infinite. You cannot drain it to anywhere because it always returns to earth.

When charges escape the porcupine, they do not make it to the cloud. They just dissipate in the air and return to ground, so they do not contribute to reducing the charge in the cloud. I'll agree that they may locally reduce the field in the air somewhat (as seen from a distance of a few feet). The argument is whether that reduction is sufficient to reduce the probability of a lightning coming from hundred or thousands of feet higher up.

Think of it another way. The earth is conductive. At least until lightning strikes causing great amounts of currents, before that point little current flows, so the potential along the earth is not affected very much by a few charges flowing out of a porcupine because the earth is conductive and charges are replaced as soon as they escape. Charges may be flowing out and into the air, but the earth's potential is the same, and the potential difference between earth and the cloud is what causes the lighting to go.

The other side of the argument is whether it is actually a good thing to eliminate smaller strikes, as they act as bleeders and may prevent the larger strikes.

I am not sure I want a lightning protection device that would reduce the number of smaller strikes at the expense of greater probability of getting the big one.

There is a lot of anecdotic evidence that these types of devices work, but no serious, objective, peer reviewed studies to support the same.

The bottom line, as long as you are happy with it, and you do not cause other problems doing this, why not do it? Just be aware that it may or may not work, and it may even increase the probability of getting a serious hit.

73,
Didier KO4BB

At 10:20 AM 3/21/2004, you wrote:
I think that's the key.  Their web page is misleading, but, in my own
belief, not entirely wrong.  Yes, there will be direct strikes to the
tower, even the whiskers.  But before the differential reaches the point
of discharge, I think the whiskers are trying hard to discharge it
slowly, thus preventing some of the smaller strikes.


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Bill Aycock - W4BSG Woodville, Alabama


_______________________________________________

See: http://www.mscomputer.com for "Self Supporting Towers", "Wireless Weather Stations", and lot's more. Call Toll Free, 1-800-333-9041 with any questions and ask for Sherman, W2FLA.

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