Industrial Toys
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Feb 25, 2008
- Messages
- 16,742
- Location
- Ontario Canada
- Tractor
- Kubota R510 Wheel Loader + Cab and backhoe, JD 6200 Open Station, Cushman 6150, 4x4, ten foot 56 hp Kubota diesel hydraulic wing mower, Steiner 430 Diesel Max, Kawasaki Diesel Mule, JD 4x2 Electric Gator
I am just in the process of replacing a clothes line. The old one was lagged into the bricks of the house and attached to a tree at the far end. Now the tree is dead and I have installed an old salvaged (With wonderfull creosote) hydro pole. I will install a buried anchor to keep the pole plumb.
Question is, should I insulate the guy wire or use it as a ground for the pulley/cable system?
We get our fair share of lightning damage around here. Without a lick of insurance of any kind, I am running around unplugging things during storms, and have disconnect switches installed on electronic controlled appliances. Remarkably, the clothes line has never been hit, nor intoduced any stray charges into the house. I would have expected otherwise!
A customer of mine, had a clothes line attached to a very well grounded steel post. Lightning hit, and one could only find tiny bits of vinyl from the line scattered everywhere! Later is was discovered that the steel in the line had vaporized and actually burned holes in their brand new thermopane windows.
So maybe, I shouldn't ground it. I know every code and electrical authority will tell you, you can't go wrong with grounding. Ground everything!
One other question, that someone might know. Why are guy wires on utility poles insulated? Is it to stop possible electrocution if the upper hardware became live? Is it to stop electroalisis (sp?) shortening the life of the galvanized anchor?
Question is, should I insulate the guy wire or use it as a ground for the pulley/cable system?
We get our fair share of lightning damage around here. Without a lick of insurance of any kind, I am running around unplugging things during storms, and have disconnect switches installed on electronic controlled appliances. Remarkably, the clothes line has never been hit, nor intoduced any stray charges into the house. I would have expected otherwise!
A customer of mine, had a clothes line attached to a very well grounded steel post. Lightning hit, and one could only find tiny bits of vinyl from the line scattered everywhere! Later is was discovered that the steel in the line had vaporized and actually burned holes in their brand new thermopane windows.
So maybe, I shouldn't ground it. I know every code and electrical authority will tell you, you can't go wrong with grounding. Ground everything!
One other question, that someone might know. Why are guy wires on utility poles insulated? Is it to stop possible electrocution if the upper hardware became live? Is it to stop electroalisis (sp?) shortening the life of the galvanized anchor?
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