Weather & Hail Warnings

RAArmstrong

///Member
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Here's there radar images for Joburg
 

Luigi_S

Member
How long do you think this is going to go on for? Trying to take an engine out of the car and it's hard, even in the garage, lol.
 

adamr

Well-known member
Fuck modem blew again R3000 down the drain (again) ... Wife was out shopping and I wasn't at home


Sent from my  iPhone 6 Plus
 

FiRi@Rennzport

Well-known member
Official Advertiser
adamr said:
Fuck modem blew again R3000 down the drain (again) ... Wife was out shopping and I wasn't at home


Sent from my  iPhone 6 Plus
Erm....Adam....please invest in lightning pole for your house and get it earthed properly....seems the lighting loves your stuff. Sucks when it blows
 

JENICH

///Member
Adamr
I have a new router from Mweb that I collected yesterday if you want.
I am still using my dLink router.

I just got off my flat roof because the water was standing.
Unplugged the holes so it can flow freely.
Pool also over flowing. Need to backwash.

Take care guys
 

adamr

Well-known member
Thanks Jenich got a cheapo spare that I'm using . @firoze well definitely going to do that now


Sent from my  iPhone 6 Plus
 

Ralf*

///Member
Firoze_D said:
adamr said:
Fuck modem blew again R3000 down the drain (again) ... Wife was out shopping and I wasn't at home


Sent from my  iPhone 6 Plus
Erm....Adam....please invest in lightning pole for your house and get it earthed properly....seems the lighting loves your stuff. Sucks when it blows

what about, if lightning strikes the telephone pole, 5 houses down, but the current flows down the telephone line into your ADSL router
Happened to me a while back
 

FiRi@Rennzport

Well-known member
Official Advertiser
Ralf@Speedway Motorsport said:
Firoze_D said:
adamr said:
Fuck modem blew again R3000 down the drain (again) ... Wife was out shopping and I wasn't at home


Sent from my  iPhone 6 Plus
Erm....Adam....please invest in lightning pole for your house and get it earthed properly....seems the lighting loves your stuff. Sucks when it blows

what about, if lightning strikes the telephone pole, 5 houses down, but the current flows down the telephone line into your ADSL router
Happened to me a while back
Crap...then you must just go turn salt
 

Ralf*

///Member
Firoze_D said:
Crap...then you must just go turn salt

explain ?

the telephone pole 5 house away took a direct hit a while back, it split the pole totally, and fused all the strands of telephone wires

Telkom had to replace the pole, and a whole section of overhead wires

My ADSL also went up in smoke that day, even the lightning protector/power supply that came with the unit was burnt black inside
 

Ratslaaf

///Member
First thing first, you don't get such a thing as a "lightning protector". I know that's what they call it, but think about it: If lightning can travel many km's down from the heavens, what chance does a small device have of "protecting" anything?

The correct term is actually a lightning diverter. The idea is to "divert" lightning away from devices sitting down stream. Now think about this: You've got a diverter installed that's (hopefully) grounded. Think about what will be the shortest path to follow? Through your ADSL modem or through the diverter? If the diverter is mounted where the ADSL line enters the house and it's earthed right there with a 6 foot copper spike into the ground, then lightning will take that route and not go through your modem. If, like many users I've seen, it's some silly plug that uses home earthing (remember that earth still goes to the DB board and then only gets earthed) and is the same plug your ADSL router is connected to, you are more likely to lose your router as the 'diverter' diverts the lightning surge through a crappy earth and cannot perform its task properly.

I leave you with this: Do you think Telkom goes and disconnects all the telephone points at the Exchange whenever lightning hits? And the whole telephone network in a 20km radius terminates there - we're talking thousands of lines, all acting like antenna for lightning.

Get this right, your DSTV dish earthing and the 220V entering the house, and you will have no reason to have to suffer lightning damage again.
 

FiRi@Rennzport

Well-known member
Official Advertiser
Ralf@Speedway Motorsport said:
Firoze_D said:
Crap...then you must just go turn salt

explain ?

the telephone pole 5 house away took a direct hit a while back, it split the pole totally, and fused all the strands of telephone wires

Telkom had to replace the pole, and a whole section of overhead wires

My ADSL also went up in smoke that day, even the lightning protector/power supply that came with the unit was burnt black inside
I meant crap as in that's bad luck...
 

netercol

New member
Gbyleveldt said:
First thing first, you don't get such a thing as a "lightning protector". I know that's what they call it, but think about it: If lightning can travel many km's down from the heavens, what chance does a small device have of "protecting" anything?

The correct term is actually a lightning diverter. The idea is to "divert" lightning away from devices sitting down stream. Now think about this: You've got a diverter installed that's (hopefully) grounded. Think about what will be the shortest path to follow? Through your ADSL modem or through the diverter? If the diverter is mounted where the ADSL line enters the house and it's earthed right there with a 6 foot copper spike into the ground, then lightning will take that route and not go through your modem. If, like many users I've seen, it's some silly plug that uses home earthing (remember that earth still goes to the DB board and then only gets earthed) and is the same plug your ADSL router is connected to, you are more likely to lose your router as the 'diverter' diverts the lightning surge through a crappy earth and cannot perform its task properly.

I leave you with this: Do you think Telkom goes and disconnects all the telephone points at the Exchange whenever lightning hits? And the whole telephone network in a 20km radius terminates there - we're talking thousands of lines, all acting like antenna for lightning.

Get this right, your DSTV dish earthing and the 220V entering the house, and you will have no reason to have to suffer lightning damage again.

even a telkom exchange is not immune from a direct hit. i saw the exchange at highveld in centurion after a direct hit (not supposed to happen ofc, in this case the tower earthing was not up to spesification)
nothing on earth will protect from a direct hit.. best "protectors" or diverters (if you wish) can do is protect against voltage spikes resulting from a strike in the general area..
 

Ratslaaf

///Member
^^^ Of course, you cannot ever guarantee against lightening. But as you pointed out, the station suffered damage as the earthing was not up to spec.
 
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