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| 0808 PD: Protecting an energizer from lightning |
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| Archives - Past Articles | |||
| Monday, 19 May 2008 05:05 | |||
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If you are going to work with electric fencing, sooner or later you will have a run-in with lightning. An electric fence is a beautiful antenna that periodically can act as a direct route for lightning to reach the earth, sometimes through your energizer. Below are a few things that can be done to protect an energizer from being damaged by an unwelcome bolt of lightning. Let’s start with a two-wire continuous ground fence first and then add a couple of things to it to protect it from lightning. In an unprotected fence, electricity is converted from a low voltage current to a high voltage-high amperage charge by a low impedance energizer (Figure 1*, Item A*), sent out to the fence by a lead-out wire (Item B*), through a cut-off switch (Item C*) and then on out onto the fence wire (Item D*). The second wire on the fence (Item E*) is not hooked to the energizer. It is hooked up to a ground rod (Item F*) that carries any electricity that reaches it into the earth. The way the electricity is supposed to reach the ground wire from the hot wire is by an animal making the connection between the two wires. Once the electricity reaches the earth it heads back to the energizer through the earth toward the energizer’s earth return rod (Item G*). When the electricity gets back to the energizer it has completed its circuit. There are three ways that lightning can get to the energizer: 1. through the electrical outlet that it gets its power from Lightning protection from the fence side of the energizer Just about any lightning arrestor should do the job, but, like anything, some have nicer features than others. One of those features is the ability to see if the arrestor has gotten hit by lightning. Those that are more visible tend to cost a little more but it can save some time trying to identify which arrestor took the majority of a lightning blast. Another useful device is a lightning brake, or induction coil (Item J*). The lightning brake is just what the name implies; it acts to slow down or stop a reverse flow of electricity on a fence. The lightning brake is nothing more than a coil of wire that develops an electromagnetic field when electricity flows through it. When the energizer is pumping out electricity, an electromagnetic field is set up that goes in a circle around the coil. If electricity tries to come backward in the fence, not only does it have to resist the flow of electricity out of the energizer, it also has to reverse the electromagnetic field around the lightning brake. There are several different types of lightning brakes on the market today. Some are nothing more than about 40 to 50 feet of high-voltage insulated lead-out wire wrapped into a coil. Some are bare wire held apart in a coil by a fiberglass, plastic or wooden frame. Regardless of how they are made, they all do about the same thing. Lightning protection from the electric company side of the energizer The easiest way to protect the energizer from the service side is with a surge suppressor (Item K*). Surge suppressors are relatively cheap and easy to install. Lightning protection from the earth return system You can’t always fool Mother Nature Figures and Items omitted but are available upon request to
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