Should metal chimney liners be grounded against lightning strikes?
HeyBub wrote:
andyeverett wrote:
I was at a home today which a while back had a lightning strike the
chimney and explode the top of the chimney off. On the drive home I
got to thinking, I have two metal chimney liners, one for a first
floor wood-stove and another for the furnace and only the furnace
liner is indirectly grounded, I guess, via the furnace ground. If TV
antennas need to be grounded should chimney liners be grounded as
well?
Thank you for your thoughts!
Can't hurt.
Put up a lightning rod, which doesn't ground anything, to discourage
lightning in the first place.
HeyBub wrote:
--
All is as it is.
andyeverett wrote:
I was at a home today which a while back had a lightning strike the
chimney and explode the top of the chimney off. On the drive home I
got to thinking, I have two metal chimney liners, one for a first
floor wood-stove and another for the furnace and only the furnace
liner is indirectly grounded, I guess, via the furnace ground. If TV
antennas need to be grounded should chimney liners be grounded as
well?
Thank you for your thoughts!
Can't hurt.
Put up a lightning rod, which doesn't ground anything, to discourage
lightning in the first place.
If you ground a metal liner you will just attract the lightening,
something you don't want. If lightening will blow the bricks off a
chimney which is not a conductor, I don't think lightening cares where
it strikes. If you ground it and it attracts lightening it could still
blow the top of your chimney off. A higher lightening rod may attract it
instead, (may). It's not an exact science.
--
All is as it is.
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