Do they make an inline Lightning arrester (bnc to bnc) ? I want something that plugs directly into the back of my BCT 8.
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loumaag said:N_Jay is correct, the lightning arrestor, stays outside (you don't want lightning inside). As for the connections, I have never seen a BNC type, since they are designed to be outside. Most good ones use "N" connectors with some using UHF (SO-239).
Tell that to WRRC - they lost a tower many years ago due to a main stroke hit, in spite of a very good "protection" system (which vaporized along with the tower). You were probably hit by a feeder, or induction from a main stroke.bsavery said:GOOD lightening protectors can and do work. No need to unplug anything.
Al42 said:Tell that to WRRC - they lost a tower many years ago due to a main stroke hit, in spite of a very good "protection" system (which vaporized along with the tower). You were probably hit by a feeder, or induction from a main stroke.bsavery said:GOOD lightening protectors can and do work. No need to unplug anything.
Mounted into a few tons of keystoned concrete. An 18" diameter steel ball was welded to the tower. Another 18" ball was mounted on what amounted to a piece of tower leg driven about 20 feet into the ground, connected to a ground field that took up about an acre. The gap was about 4" (small enough that 100% modulation didn't cause an arc on a rainy day, plus 1"). This was designed and installed by a commercial tower company.N_Jay said:If the lightenting "vaporized" a tower, then something was VERY wrong.
Like an old tower with rusty joints and little grouinding!
Aircraft Radio Corp. used the same thing on ARC-5 receivers (back when we had dinosaurs for pets, kiddies). They put an NE-2 neon bulb from the antenna terminal to ground.MacombMonitor said: