On Sun, 7 Sep 2014 06:37:13 -0700 (PDT), John G
wrote:
On Sunday, September 7, 2014 7:31:15 AM UTC-4, NorMinn wrote:
Wowser! Lightning strike two nights ago shook our house and sent our
puppy (briefly) into hiding. Our son lives about 1/2 mi. away as the
crow flies; the hit turned off some of his breakers. His
across-the-street neighbor got interior damage (pin-hole leaks) in his
baseboard heating system.
If lightning trips some breakers, seems to me that it also damages
wiring. No appliances damaged at son's place. After his heart
restarted, he turned off main breaker, looked around, turned back on and
all seems to be okay. Suggestions? Have electrician in to check it out?
*I suggest that you do have an electrician come out to have a look at the grounding electrode system. This consists of a water pipe ground, ground rods, bonding of all interior metal pipes, a bond to the main neutral in the electrical panel, and bonding of the telephone and cable TV terminals.
Having a good ground is a simple way to protect your house from lightning. Some enhancements to a good ground for extra lightning protection would be a surge protector at the main panel and lightning rods on the roof.
The neighbor probably got the pinhole leaks because those pipes were not properly bonded to the grounding electrode system. The difference in potential caused the arc to burn through the pipes. This has been a problem with flexible jacketed gas piping. It doesn't take much of an arc to burn a hole and cause a gas leak.
John Grabowski
http://www.MrElectrician.TV
Which is why you will NEVER see any of that my place. When I went to
have natural gas piped to my BarBQ that's all anyone wanted to
install. When I asked one plumber if he'd install if I he iron pipe
cut to size, threaded, and test fit he said ":if you can do that, you
can do the whole job yourself - just call for an inspection when you
are done" - I did.it. Called for inspection, inspector said it put a
lot of professional plumbers/pipe-fitters to shame.