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Re: [TowerTalk] Lightening

To: Grant Saviers <grants2@pacbell.net>, Patrick Greenlee <patrick_g@windstream.net>, "towertalk@contesting.com" <towertalk@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Lightening
From: Perry K4PWO <k4pwo@comcast.net>
Date: Tue, 27 Jun 2017 00:51:29 -0500
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
Agreed… to increase current density to the point where heating could form steam 
you need water intrusion.  I’d venture that reports of fractured concrete are 
due to intrusion failures.  More likely freeze damage than lightning…

Perry K4PWO

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

From: Grant Saviers
Sent: Monday, June 26, 2017 11:33 PM
To: Patrick Greenlee; towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Lightening

Some data from Concrete Society:

"Moist concrete behaves as an electrolyte with resistivity of up to 100 
ohm-m.  Air dried concrete has a resistivity in the order of 10 000 
ohm-m, whilst oven-dry concrete has a resistivity in the order of 100 
000 000 ohm-m."  So isn't likely that wet concrete is so conductive the 
energy dissipated is low and dry concrete is so dry it can't make steam 
or conduct much current?  Also consider that concrete is sufficiently 
conductive that NEC now requires all residential AC outlets over bare 
concrete floors to be GFI protected.

As a composite material then consider how the rebar matrix reduces the 
point to point conductivity much more.  (I'll leave it to others to 
figure that out). Then consider how much area is in a Ufer foundation in 
contact with earth.  In my case, about 250 sq ft for a tower base and 
720 sq ft for a foundation. Both are wet year round. Compare to a 10' 
5/8" ground rod at 1.6 sq ft of area.  So the relative current density 
at the earth interface is 2+ orders of magnitude less for my tower base, 
assuming the current is uniformly distributed by the rebar matrix (which 
it isn't since rebar has inductance, but there is a lot in parallel).

I think one idea of a Ufer is to distribute (20' minimum length buried 
conductor) over enough volume in contact with the rebar so as to prevent 
very high current densities.   Codes or policies that require Ufer's 
(grounded rebar) for power plants (IEEE), ammunition bunkers (DOD), and 
explosive storage (ATF) facilities (& NFPA) were convincing to me of the 
robustness of the engineering.  see 
http://www.wbdg.org/FFC/DOD/UFC/ufc_4_420_01_2015.pdf as a publicly 
available spec.  Some interesting requirements are specified.  Bond 
everything together.

So, I'm also a skeptic about exploding concrete being common or a 
problem to worry about.  I'd like to see a forensic analysis of 
fractured concrete that proved lightning was the cause, rather than salt 
water corrosion or improper grounding/construction or urban myth.

Grant KZ1W


On 6/26/2017 11:31 AM, Patrick Greenlee wrote:
> There seems to be an urban myth in popular circulation about 
> foundations being subject to being blown to bits or at least cracked 
> open sufficiently for them to fail due to lightning.  If this were a 
> real threat wouldn't it be common experience with Ufer grounds?  Can 
> anyone provide a reference to a properly documented incident where 
> lightning blew apart a foundation?
>
> I'd be happy to abandon my current thinking and get on board with the 
> lightning blows up concrete folks it there were sufficient factual 
> evidence.
>
> Patrick        NJ5G
>
>
> On 6/26/17 11:23 AM, Clif Keely via TowerTalk wrote:
>> Reading through some of the comments here recently have me trying to 
>> recall some of the comments I have read over the years.  I seem to 
>> recall several that spoke to using 2 or 3 ground rods on a tower 
>> which might not be a bad idea.  I should think one of the reasons 
>> would be to keep the discharge energy from making steam within the 
>> concrete base and that explosive burst of steam, producing a lot of 
>> cracking within the block and with that reducing it's ability as a 
>> solid base.  I have no research to support this but offer it only as 
>> a thought.  For myself if I hear thunder I disconnect antenna and 
>> power cables. After that I keep my fingers crossed as I think 
>> lightning will do what ever it bloody well wishes.
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