Solar collectors for heating water systems, vs the power of lightning?
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Answer:
I'm not sure about the insurance question, but all-in-all lightning is not that dangerous if you're indoors. Your house certainly has a grounding rod in the earth that will serve as a lightning rod. All of your plumbing and wiring is connected to it, and since it surrounds you, it is actually shielding you and protecting you. Click here to find out more:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/faraday_cag...
The lightning rod can be any electrical conductor that is large enough and conductive enough to carry extremely large currents, and thus withstand damage itself. The conductor will also bleed off static charge and reduce the likelihood of a strike.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/lightning_r...
If lighting struck the house I think it'd take out the TV aerial or chimney stack beore the solar panels, so I don't think I'd worry over-much. Lightning strikes aren't very common anyway, are they?
First the solar collectors are covered in clear plastic for a "greenhouse" effect - so unlikely to be stuck by lightning. The metal parts if any would be earthed and so the charge would go straight to earth. Thirdly - lightening always strikes the highest point - so you could have an earth Pole next to your house 100 feet high for extra protection. I used to have a bloody big steel factory - they knocked it down and my brothers radio aerial was struck and that arced on to the TV aerial and that was buggered! But it was OK - it was under warranty! LOL
No the TV aerial will cop it before the solar system.
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