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  #1  
Old 07-16-2008, 06:44 PM
Richard Woods Richard Woods is offline
Woods Designs
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Rep: 234 Posts: 189
Location: UK and Canada
Lightning protection

This has come up on another thread so thought I should post this as a fresh topic.

First visit www.marinelightning.com

see the photo on the home page of a catamaran sunk after being hit by lightning, June 20th 2008

Then go to www.strikeshield.com

For the solution that I used after being hit.

Sail in the tropics in the wet season or on the east coast USA right now and you will hear dozens of stories of lightning strikes. With "luck" you'll even be hit yourself.

I sailed up the east coast of the USA in 2003 and met 2 other English boats doing the same. All three of us were hit by lightning.

Later in Panama we were anchored with a group of 12 boats. In one storm 6 were hit. Not us, we had a Strikeshield system fitted, or were lucky.

I write more about my lightning strike on the article pages of my website

www.sailingcatamarans.com

Richard Woods of Woods Designs
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  #2  
Old 08-07-2008, 07:01 PM
oldsailor7 oldsailor7 is offline
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Join Date: May 2008
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Location: Sydney Australia
A case in point.
Our Trimaran, with a wooden mast, was moored in a slip at a Marina in Canada. In the slip beside us was a keelboat with an alloy mast. He had bolted copper conductors, on the inside of his wooden hull, from the main shroud chainplates to the keel bolts.
A lightning strike hit the top of his mast. The Current flowed down the shrouds, along the copper earthing strips untill it reached the waterline, at which point it went out thru the hull, blowing holes in the hull on both sides. The boat sank in the slip.

Our boat was not touched, which may (or may not) have been because ours had a wooden mast and the metal mast of the keelboat beside us was more attractive to the hungry lightning strike. Perhaps we were just Lucky.
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  #3  
Old 08-08-2008, 03:41 PM
pir8ped pir8ped is offline
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I spent 3 months on a 70' junk in Hong Kong. I went on deck one evening during a thunderstorm, looked up, and saw lightning hit the wooden foremast. There seemed to be no damage. I thought I must have imagined it, but I went up the next morning to inspect the damage - a couple of square inches of burnt paint.

I don't know if that proves anything...
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  #4  
Old 08-10-2008, 12:20 AM
Richard Atkin Richard Atkin is offline
atn_atkin@hotmail.com
 
Join Date: Jul 2007
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Location: Wellington, New Zealand
If lightning hits your boat, but your body is not hit directly, does the huge spike in electromagnetic radiation cause any harm to the human body or brain?? Maybe that's not the best question to ask in a boat forum.
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  #5  
Old 08-10-2008, 11:54 AM
pir8ped pir8ped is offline
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I didn't feel a thing, and have no reason to think I was damaged in any way.
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