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"MikeM" wrote in message ... Dan Jacobson wrote: GIF of plane hit by lightning: http://bm6aak.myweb.hinet.net/file/456.gif (Lightning hits planes everyday and is no big deal.) What it clearly shows is that airplanes do not get "hit by lightning". What actually happens is that a lightning bolt already headed from ground to cloud sometimes makes a small detour through a conductive object (airplane) if it happens to be where the lightening bolt may have gone anyway. There are billions of volts cloud-to-ground before the strike. Once the air in the lightning bolt path is ionized, the current that flows is only a few thousand Amps. A metallic aircraft, if it becomes part of the current path, has a max voltage drop across it of only a few hundred volts. The airplane is self-protected in the same way as installing a #8awg copper wire from a "lightening rod" from the roof of a barn, around the outside of the barn, to a ground rod. During a strike, the potential from tip of the lightening rod to the ground under the barn is constrained to a few hundred volts... This keeps the destructive current path out of the wood; it flows along the copper wire instead of in the wood. Dont try this with a plastic, composite or wood aircraft. The current pulse instantly turns absorbed moisture into steam, literally blowing the aircraft apart. Some occasional exceptions. One DC-10 I worked had a real interesting bit of artwork after a strike. Along the left side there was a splotch about three feet long as if some artist had painted a jagged line with his paintbrush. On closer exam, the splotch consisted of pitted and melted aluminum. Back when the Weather Radar (AVQ 10/30) used a parabolic dish for a scanner, the scanner bearings could get welded solid. The scanner probe consisted of an approx. 4 inch long 1/4 inch diameter alloy rod for a probe. This rod was encapsulated into a solid 3/4 inch Teflon cylinder. After a strike this Teflon could look like a bit of Swiss cheese or a bad case of termites. JK |
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