patrickg
Veteran Member
I am curious how prevalent lightening damage and other interesting phenomena are as observed by rural folks. In just a few months at my new location I have experienced at least 2 if not 3 close encounters of the lightening variety.
My well pump is 240 volt and is on a breaker on the shops breaker pannel A N D has a fuse in each leg in the disconnect box on the wall in the well house. These are cartridge fuses about the diameter of and half as long as a .410 shell. Breaker did not trip off-line. One of the fuses looked good but was bad the other had exploded like a firecracker. They are 30 amp and are supposed to protect the pump against lightening. Replaced fuses and pump works. Second time in 4 months. A couple months ago lightening blew a limb off of a tree about 40 ft from well house. Next tree over (30 ft from well house) now has dead limbs and evidence of a lightening hit. Hopefully this is N O T predictive of how it will be in the out years.
The new alarm system installed in my mom's house 6-700 ft from well house was damaged also. It went bonkers and put digital noise on the phone line making loging onto the net virtually impossible although you could talk over the interference (a repeating seriec of clicks some louder clicks then repeat, alwas same number of soft and loud clicks.)
No other damage noted.
I saw a TV special on lightening while in Iowa and they quoted some statistics about the number of people killed each year in the US by lightening. Pretty scary stuff. Being on the phone or a computer with lightening within several miles is a very dangerous thing. One man was truly hit out of the blue. There was not a single cloud in sight (but there was one 10 miles away on the other side of a mountain) and this guy is smoked out of his socks. Another was a concert at a large outdoor sports complex. A lady in mid level seating surrounded by thousands of other people was nearly killed by lightening that did not touch anyone else. And on and on and on...
Anyone have any personal experience of lightening damage to share?
Patrick
My well pump is 240 volt and is on a breaker on the shops breaker pannel A N D has a fuse in each leg in the disconnect box on the wall in the well house. These are cartridge fuses about the diameter of and half as long as a .410 shell. Breaker did not trip off-line. One of the fuses looked good but was bad the other had exploded like a firecracker. They are 30 amp and are supposed to protect the pump against lightening. Replaced fuses and pump works. Second time in 4 months. A couple months ago lightening blew a limb off of a tree about 40 ft from well house. Next tree over (30 ft from well house) now has dead limbs and evidence of a lightening hit. Hopefully this is N O T predictive of how it will be in the out years.
The new alarm system installed in my mom's house 6-700 ft from well house was damaged also. It went bonkers and put digital noise on the phone line making loging onto the net virtually impossible although you could talk over the interference (a repeating seriec of clicks some louder clicks then repeat, alwas same number of soft and loud clicks.)
No other damage noted.
I saw a TV special on lightening while in Iowa and they quoted some statistics about the number of people killed each year in the US by lightening. Pretty scary stuff. Being on the phone or a computer with lightening within several miles is a very dangerous thing. One man was truly hit out of the blue. There was not a single cloud in sight (but there was one 10 miles away on the other side of a mountain) and this guy is smoked out of his socks. Another was a concert at a large outdoor sports complex. A lady in mid level seating surrounded by thousands of other people was nearly killed by lightening that did not touch anyone else. And on and on and on...
Anyone have any personal experience of lightening damage to share?
Patrick