[aprssig] Re: Operation Uinta Report
Mark Fellhauer
sparkfel at qwest.net
Sat Oct 1 07:06:31 EDT 2005
At 08:20 PM 9/30/2005, Bruce Prior wrote:
> One lightning strike was extremely close, as I sheltered in the car,
> grateful for its insulating rubber tires.
If lightning can jump through several miles of atmosphere, a few inches of
high-carbon vulcanized rubber (with embedded steel belts, no less), is not
going to protect you from a lightning strike. Modern passenger tires are
up to 28% carbon black.
I have read at least one report where a dump truck hit a high voltage power
line and the power flowing through the truck body and tires heated the air
inside the tires enough to cause them to explode. How many ENG Vans a
year crank up their masts into power lines?
If you're lucky, the metal cocoon of a car around you will carry off the
charge. Been there, done that - in both cars and aircraft. I've seen
lightning hit underground power lines.
BTW, it's a myth that you can only be electrocuted if you're
grounded. Death by capacitance is a distinct possibility. Electricity
is a harsh mistress.
Regards,
Mark
KC7BXS
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