Mailing List os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com Archived Message #6722

From: "Mike Luther" <os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com> Full Headers
Undecoded message
Subject: Re: [OS2Wireless] Wireless router (mainly OFF TOPIC)
Date: Fri, 26 Mar 2010 03:57:04 GMT
To: "OS/2 Wireless Users Mailing List" <os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com>

** Reply to note from "OS/2 Wireless Users Mailing List"  
<os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com> Thu, 25 Mar 2010 21:48:16 -0400
 
Serious professional advice from a NARTE certified Master Telecommunications  
Engineer since 1985 here about lightning.  
 
> Wow! That's all I can think to say about such a massive lightening strike and
> the negative results. No, that's not true. I think you just convinced me to
> do two things:
>    
> 1] Buy a UPS regardless of the physical size of the unit and find room for it
> no matter what! 2] Get myself some renter's insurance, regardless of the
> monthly or yearly premium!
 
Smart decision.  But the folks here need to know some real radio facts about  
lightning to make a proper decision on protection.  As a commercial broadcast  
engineer since even the late 1950's and even Chief Engineer for the Texas Aggie  
WTAW radio station back then paying my way through A&M, I offer some serious  
information.  
 
Lightning is *NOT* electricity as most people think about that.  It is, for  
fact, a very intense radio wave issue!  As such, it does *NOT* travel through a  
wire or metal object!  It actually travels on the SURFACE of it.  Further, since  
it is a radio wave and it oscillates, it also focuses on some frequency during  
the actual strike, which CHANGES as the strike takes place in those thousandths    
of a second!  Frequency means that, as to the stroke going through the  
atmosphere or down the surface of a tree, wire; whatever, it has a wavelength  
just like a broadcast station transmitter output or TV station.  Radio waves are  
curious, in that for each QUARTER wavelength we see a MAXIMUM current for  
MINIMUM voltage, then a reversal to a MAXIMUM voltage for a MINIMUM current a  
quarter wave down the path from there.    
 
The air gap voltage required in the atmosphere for an arc to proceed through it  
is perhaps 35,000 or so volts per inch.  Think about that.  How many million  
volts per bolt?  Yes, the air is burned into a conduction path, the SURFACE of  
which is conducting the lightning.  But wait!  Remember, a million volts at one  
end of the quarter wave point and maybe a thousand amperes current?  Then a  
quarter wave later a million amperes and then a thousand volts?  Interesting.  
 
The absolute 'intent' of a lightning bolt which travels between a cloud and  
ground, because it MUST travel on the SURFACE of the conductor, is to actually  
spread itself out across the SURFACE of the earth at that end of the path.  Well  
fine, if as part of the strike conduction path, the surface travel down to the  
earth terminates in such a way that on the SURFACE of whatever conductor, that  
surface is actually touching and bonded to the surface of the earth.  But in the  
case of the horrid hit described earlier here, if the metal surface of the  
conductor carries it down into a hollow shaft below the surface of the earth,  
and thence down the surface of the metal wires to other houses, apartments;  
whatever, the only path toward the surface of the earth will be as described.    
Through MASSIVE damage sites inside the building(s)!  
 
As well, because the strike is a huge magnetic pulse issue, a strike also  
radiates that same Electro Magnetic Pulse (EMP) out away from it.  Thus even  
though the strike hits your neighbor's house, the pulse lights up EVERY wire in  
it's path, at the speed of light, as the energy radiates away from the hit as  
well.  Interesting.  
 
OK, how do we REALLY protect against lightning?   Answers.  
 
That NEMA ground rod at your power meter entrance to the building is there  
generically for this reason as well as bonding the power line ground wire to  
ground from your electric service.  But the real problem is that this NEMA  
ground rod is driven INTO the ground!  Which does *NOT* do much good for the  
radio wave lighting strike which is traveling trying to reach the SURFACE of the  
earth.  If you really want to use this to protect your home, apartment or  
whatever, the proper way to do this is to fan out a little wire radial group in  
a circle around that NEMA ground rod, about six or eight feet long for each  
wire.  Like the spokes on a wagon wheel.  Which go down only a small inch or so  
at GROUND level from the NEMA rod.  What that does is to properly shift the  
lightning bolt to the SURFACE of the ground as it roars down the ground wire to  
that NEMA ground rod.  You do the same thing for the bottoms of TV antenna  
poles, metal flag poles, the wire that carries lighting arrester spikes at the  
top of the buidling to the ground.
 
Further, you NEVER pass antenna wires directly into the attic or through the  
window into the place  - unless - you have a proper lightning arrestor plasma  
device which lets the shock arc through it from the SURFACE of the wire that  
goes into the building to a good heavy flat sheet copper strip with a wide  
surface to the ground.  And then out along the surface like the NEMA rod deal.    
A round wire has little surface, right?  The proper lightning ground is the flat  
surface of a copper strip, even though it is rather thin.  
 
Plus the proper place to put the lightning protection on the power, phone lines,  
TV cable system and so on is at this common place near your power meter and so  
on.  That to divert the bolt AWAY from the bulding.  You really want it all to  
be protected together from a common decent protection set of devices.  Even to a  
for real master protection set of devices on your meter, and NOT these deals you  
buy to 'protect' your stuff in the house.  Yes, the do OK for noise.  But not  
for lightning.  About the only thing they are good for is the insurance you may  
get with them too.  Scowl.  
 
Now we go inside.  But before we do please note.  OK, so the average quarter  
wavelength of the huge bolt is at 1 Megahertz, 1000 Khz on your AM radio dial.    
But the bolt also can and does have an average quarter wavelength of only say  
EIGHT feet as well with frequencies way up in the TV channel area at points in  
it's split second of lifespan.  Ouch.  Which are still traveling over the  
OUTSIDE of all the wires going through your building if you let it in too.  
 
AHA!  Now you know why in many strikes that penetrate a building, you'll see  
your TV blown to bits on one part of the same power circuit that doesn't fry  
your guitar amp eight feet away.  Hmmmmmm.   More important, there is a HUGE  
issue here very few people know and understand about so-called surge protector  
plug boxes you get to 'protect' your computer; guitar amp -- and so on.  These  
protector devices, at least virtually all of them, work by letting a pulse of  
over a couple hundred volts arc across a path to the GROUND neutral, the big  
round rod on a three prong power plug.  Well so what?  Remember that because  
lightning is a radio wave, just because it shunts the surge to that green wire  
ground connection, where is that, in terms of quarter wave spacing, for the hot  
spots on the lighting bolt as that happens?  
 
Surprise!  Ground, in this case, may not even be back toward the electric panel  
and the NEMA rod.  Instead, it may be actually going down the SURFACE of that  
same green wire INTO your computer, your guitar amplifier, your TV set!  Now  
watch what else ABSOLUTELY happens to virtually all modern electronic gear.    
Years ago we gave up metal transformer power supplies for such things.  All of  
the conversion from 120 volts or 240 volt of AC (Alternating Current) down the  
power lines to the DC (Direct Current) for the equipment, is done through what  
is now switching power supplies.  But that is a DISASTER for a voltage spike  
which comes IN on the green ground wire, seeking out the phone line ground,  
perhaps, or .. worse .. your PRINTER!  Because your laser printer draws a high  
power amount you can't pay for UPS coverage.  So you plug it in to the power  
plug and then connect it with a metal ground wire to your computer which is on  
your UPS.  Get the idea?  
 
What happens is that the lightning strike, even only a hundred volts maybe by  
the time it gets here, raises the GROUND foils of your computer above the GROUND  
level for a SURFACE radio wave for the difference of 120 volts AC to 12 volts DC  
and...  Surprise!  If it is a 300 volt pulse, your ground foils are 30 volts  
above ground and POOF your whole computer, guitar amp, TV set, stereo is blown  
to bits.  It is not at all unusual for even a strike on your neighbor's place to  
surge your power lines up to 600 volts or so.  Not at all.
 
Bottom line.  The ONLY way to use a UPS to protect anything is to make SURE that  
your UPS uses a METAL TRANSFORMER to isolate the house from whatever you are  
trying to protect.  Why?   Because the lightning bolt cannot pass through the  
metal pig iron between the primary coil and the secondary coil wires in it.    
Thus that really DOES ISOLATE your equipment from the pulse.  But ONLY if you  
protect ALL of the devices on the output side.  And do *NOT* run your printer  
elsewhere and then connect it to your computer.  Or use any kind of phone line  
or cable modem connection metal wire to another ground possible source to the  
protected device.  Without thinking carefully how it is absolutely protected to  
keep the pulse out of the building and shunted to ground properly.  
 
There does happen to be a form of surge protector that does not have this  
horrible pulse clamp effect.  But it is quite rare.  It uses an inductor choke  
and capacitor to clamp the pulse to the HOUSE side of the power line service and  
like the transformer style device, blocks the pulse from crawling on the surface  
of the wire into your equipment.  It sure isn't sold in Walmart, Lowes, HEB or  
any place like that folks.  
 
Final notes here.  If you are using huge antenna farm stuff like I do as a  
serious ham radio operator with towers all over the place at my site, you also  
may be required to put a substantial metal wire circular ring around the house  
which bonds the various sink ground spoke sites at several places going into the  
building!  And, in fact, my site gets a direct hit on the average of at least  
twice a year big time.  My towers are all grounded and radial spanned at the  
bottoms for protection purposes.  As well the feed lines are all brought in  
either at underground level, properly protected by plasma arc protectors there  
at tower connections.  Or in the proper ground plate side panel entry points  
that do properly connect to the ground.  I have had this careful protection  
since about 1980 at the site.  And direct hit after direct hit, I have NEVER  
since ever had a computer failure or radio or any failure, other than a couple  
modem failures ever since properly protecting it.    
 
But I do use all proper pig iron UPS stuff there.  Which in my case has been for  
years the APC full professional sine wave output Smart UPS units.  As well all  
the computer equipment on the site is also actually still pig iron linear power  
supply relay rack stuff.  I use *NO* switching power supply stuff at all in any  
rural heavy tower radio site locations, like we also never do at broadcast  
stations.  Which get hit a heck of a lot more with their 250-500 foot high  
towers that are a lot higher than mine, chuckle.  And at WTAW's 1150KHz AM  
frequency is a 256 foot quarter wave high tower.  Which we took about 60 hits a  
year while I was Chief Engineer there paying my way through A&M.  And never once  
lost anything from an antenna strike.  
 
Sorry for all the words.  I am just trying to help here..  
 
> Do you have any quick methods of how-to size up what power-level of UPS to
> buy? I know I can go to google.com and find the info but if you have some
> quick method off the top of your head it will save me the time of reading and
> figuring out for myself what I need. Not to mention the fact that also I
> trust your judgment more so than what I might find on the 'net.
 
You have to totalize the wattage level use of the electronic equipment you wish  
to protect.  Then you figure out how long the batteries of the UPS will crank  
out that much wattage to keep things going.  Either so you can shut it down if  
you are hit, or it will go on until the real chances are that decent power will  
be restored.  At my ham radio site, when I am not there, the APC UPS with the  
battery power level available to it, will keep the simple computer, phone line  
access and low level VHF data service going for about 24 hours.  I've only once  
since the 1980's ever not been able to get out there in more than 24 hours to  
shut things down and police the things if I'm not there on site when bad things  
happen to the power at this very rural location.  
 
Not the same Mike.  
    
> Thanks Mike, seriously! You've knocked some digital sense into this old
> brain-pan of mine, and for that I am grateful. I'd be sick if I lost even
> half of my gear!
>    
> Greg
 
But with the best of my professional heart at work here to help not only you but  
the otheres who might benefit from this.  



--> Sleep well; OS2's still awake! ;)

Mike Luther
Mike.Luther@ziplog.com
Mike.Luther@f3001.n117.z1.fidonet.org

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