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#1
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Thunderstorm season seems to be starting early this year. Currently have
some cells moving across Lake Michigan, kicking up a bit of a racket on the MW band as I listen to WLS 890 (50 kw blowtorch) in Chicago. Steve Holland, MI Drake R7, R8 and R8B http://www.iserv.net/~n8kdv/dxpage.htm |
#2
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Good Luck !
Strength and Honor "N8KDV" wrote in message ... Thunderstorm season seems to be starting early this year. Currently have some cells moving across Lake Michigan, kicking up a bit of a racket on the MW band as I listen to WLS 890 (50 kw blowtorch) in Chicago. Steve Holland, MI Drake R7, R8 and R8B http://www.iserv.net/~n8kdv/dxpage.htm |
#3
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![]() Maximus wrote: Good Luck ! Thanks, the storms are about half way across the lake now. I thought they might dissipate after hitting the colder water, but it doesn't seem to have hurt them too much at this time. http://www.weatherunderground.com/ra...olland%2c%20MI Strength and Honor "N8KDV" wrote in message ... Thunderstorm season seems to be starting early this year. Currently have some cells moving across Lake Michigan, kicking up a bit of a racket on the MW band as I listen to WLS 890 (50 kw blowtorch) in Chicago. Steve Holland, MI Drake R7, R8 and R8B http://www.iserv.net/~n8kdv/dxpage.htm |
#4
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![]() Michael Melland wrote: More on the way..... one going East through Oshkosh, WI area now.... Gonna be a noisy night I fear. -- Michael Melland, W9WIS Winneconne, WI USA http://webpages.charter.net/w9wis |
#5
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Ten years ago there were monster thunder storms here in Dallas, I mean these
bad boys would last for 6+ hours. Not many like that anymore, still bad, but typically they blow through in an hour or so. I have two different neighbors that have been hit, in their backyards and both incidents destroyed pretty much everything electronic in the house. I now unplug my antenna if the storms are close. "N8KDV" wrote in message ... Thunderstorm season seems to be starting early this year. Currently have some cells moving across Lake Michigan, kicking up a bit of a racket on the MW band as I listen to WLS 890 (50 kw blowtorch) in Chicago. Steve Holland, MI Drake R7, R8 and R8B http://www.iserv.net/~n8kdv/dxpage.htm |
#6
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![]() Jim Douglas wrote: Ten years ago there were monster thunder storms here in Dallas, I mean these bad boys would last for 6+ hours. Not many like that anymore, still bad, but typically they blow through in an hour or so. I have two different neighbors that have been hit, in their backyards and both incidents destroyed pretty much everything electronic in the house. I now unplug my antenna if the storms are close. All the antennas here are unplugged. About to roll a few smokes and step outside to watch it roll in. Should hit the shore here in just a bit. "N8KDV" wrote in message ... Thunderstorm season seems to be starting early this year. Currently have some cells moving across Lake Michigan, kicking up a bit of a racket on the MW band as I listen to WLS 890 (50 kw blowtorch) in Chicago. Steve Holland, MI Drake R7, R8 and R8B http://www.iserv.net/~n8kdv/dxpage.htm |
#7
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I live in southern Mississippi. Last Tuesday (Mardi Gras) night, I was
listening to the BBC on my Super ATS-909. A light, drizzly rain had been falling for about an hour. I was wearing a light pair of Sony digital-grade headphones, because my wife was watching the news on television in the same room. All of a sudden, a huge flash (our sitting area overlooks the lake we live on -- and has large picture windows) and an ENORMOUS "KABOOM!!!" happened. No other thunder (or lightning) happened, before or after -- this was the only strike. Now I really understand that this is the kind of event that kills golfers. Our kids came running downstairs, asking us what had happened. I opened our front door, and saw a "striped" longleaf pine with steam coming off of it, and knew immediately that we had just experienced a serious lightning strike. That tree was right at 50 feet away from the spot that my "random-wire" antenna goes out of my bedroom window, and winds around the house, hidden on the back of the soffit. The Super 909 was still alive, but lightning did find its way into our phone line (we have underground utilities), killing the dial-up modem and the keyboard in my wife's computer and the network interface cards in both my daughter's and my computer. I also had to replace the fuses in our alarm system. Since NIC cards are cheap, and we use DSL (don't need the dialups) I was able to recover from this by investing about an hour's work and less than $30.00 for new NICs. I was thankful that my Super 909 survived, and I e-mailed Chris Justice at RadioLabs to let him know what had transpired. As it turns out, he actually DID make a modification that may have kept the radio from getting zapped! Here's his response to my note: "You don't have a clue how lucky you are! Serious. I went to a Lightning engineering course at Poly Phaser in Nevada for 7 days to study the effects of lightning and what paths are travelled. If that longwire was only 50' from where your wire was, you are damned lucky!" "The damage that you mentioned is not from a line getting struck, but rather from the ground suddenly becoming an above ground source.... In other words, the "Ground" that everything else in the house is attached to started raising to a potential of 1000 - 50,000 volts. The damage occurs when the telephone, cable, electrical and all of the other lines still stay at their same normal potential.... 110 volts, 24 volts and cable TV ground.... So, you see the problem. The 1000 - 50,000 volt charge tries to escape through the little life lines to your house. So............ BOOM! IF that would have come down your longwire and into your headphones, I as well as your family would be very very upset right now. So, you are one lucky guy!" "I am suprised though. You helped me out in a geek kind of way. I installed a diode shunt on the front end of the Super 909's antenna jack, before the RF amplifier. If the lightening struck that close, I know that the ambient static voltage on that wire was quite high, enough to blow out the front end FET... So, most likely it worked. Thanks for risking your life to test the 909... I appreciate it!" So that's my little story -- I thought I'd share it with you guys. -- Stinger Super 909 Lightning Tester ;^) "N8KDV" wrote in message ... Thunderstorm season seems to be starting early this year. Currently have some cells moving across Lake Michigan, kicking up a bit of a racket on the MW band as I listen to WLS 890 (50 kw blowtorch) in Chicago. Steve Holland, MI Drake R7, R8 and R8B http://www.iserv.net/~n8kdv/dxpage.htm |
#8
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More on the way..... one going East through Oshkosh, WI area now....
-- Michael Melland, W9WIS Winneconne, WI USA http://webpages.charter.net/w9wis |
#9
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![]() N8KDV wrote: All the antennas here are unplugged. About to roll a few smokes and step outside to watch it roll in. Should hit the shore here in just a bit. Steve, Do you smoke? Bad boy, bad Steve. Go to your room with out dinner. Burr |
#10
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![]() Burr wrote: N8KDV wrote: All the antennas here are unplugged. About to roll a few smokes and step outside to watch it roll in. Should hit the shore here in just a bit. Steve, Do you smoke? Bad boy, bad Steve. Go to your room with out dinner. Burr I sure do. About a pack a day of my own home rolled brand. Beats Camel's. |
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