Barbicane
Civil/Environmental
- May 8, 2005
- 8
The Electrical Engineers want to spend less on lightning protection by using the legs of self supporting towers, 40 to 80 feet high as the down conductors. This has been allowed by NFPA-780 for years. The National Electric Code has permitted the use of rebar as a grounding electrode for decades. Doesn't ACI permit foundations without rebar under limited conditions? Part of the transition to the new system is greater reliance on exothermic welds. I don't like heating high strength steel to cherry red with this process because it weakens high strength steel. Pipe sections are especially vulnerable to this process. Guyed towers do not seem to be as vulnerable to lightning strikes as self supporting towers probably because the charge is divided as it travels down the metal pathways. One of the reasons we have "overdone" the lightning protection was a singular event that caused a 40 foot self-supporting tower to nearly topple because a #6 wire in a 3/4 inch steel conduit caused a high resistance connection that generated so much steam so fast that it blew out a sizable chunk of a 5 x 5 x 5 foot tower foundation. Does extra steel in a foundation have benificial effects on overall conductivity? Does carbonization reduce conductivity?