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FlyDunes

Since 09 Oct 2007
1034 Posts
Aloha
XTreme Poster
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Mon Aug 18, 08 6:20 am OT: Shocking! |
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So yesterday some friends and I went to the coast to paraglide, and we were land-kiting while we were waiting for good conditions.
There were some big over developed cummies off shore behind Tillamook head and occasional lightning strikes way off in the distance. So anyway, Kelton is pulling off some jumps next to me and when he landed there was this cracking noise like he had a load of ball bearings in his pockets or something. So I asked "what do you have in your pockets?" And he says "nothing" and jumps again. And then he said "but its really strange, coz every time I land there's this noise and I get strange tingling sensation in my legs, like I'm being shocked".
I yelled "PUT THE KITE DOWN!"
Holy shit. I think he was about to get zip fried! I've read 1st hand accounts of people who got struck by lightning and they had described the same kind of sensation.
I figure he was collecting a little charge every time he jumped and then discharging like a big static shock every time he landed. Maybe that's the worst that would have happened, but we decided not to find out....
_________________ Lets FLY |
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pdxmonkeyboy

Since 16 May 2006
6081 Posts
forever labled as the
retired kiter & motorhead Unicorn Master
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Mon Aug 18, 08 7:03 am |
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| I was climbing in Colorado once and there was electrical storms coming in. My hair started standing on edge and I swear to god my ice axe had this weird faint halo around it. Scary indeed and uber dangerous.
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Diggy

Since 25 Nov 2006
342 Posts
Gorge to Coast
Obsessed
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Mon Aug 18, 08 7:40 am |
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Growing up on the west coast of Florida I've always heard that before a lightning strikes that you will feel it and hair will stand and to drop flat on the ground if you experience this. I think putting the kite down and fast was certainlty appropriete, along with re-evaluating the choice to have kites up when lightning is hitting the water offshore. Lightning will look for the path of least resistance which will typically be the highest object.
Nothing you didn't already know I'm sure, just glad there was no serious incident.
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KidCorporate

Since 10 Jul 2007
563 Posts
Addicted
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Mon Aug 18, 08 7:45 am |
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Heh, I'm listening to the thunder rolling over Bingen as I read this So we had a big debate over how likely you would be to struck by lightning while kiting, does anyone have any input on this?
_________________ Let's go kite. |
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tekko

Since 20 Feb 2006
376 Posts
White Salmon
Liquid Force
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Mon Aug 18, 08 8:01 am |
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not on being struck.. but definitely being shocked.
Had similar description happen a couple times in Hatteras back in the day. Even miles ahead of the storm, there would be static. Same thing.. every time you left and came back to the water, there would be a shock.
One day in the ocean, it was enough that it was uncomfortable to hold the bar during the shock.. and would get shocked each time you went over a wave and dropped off the backside.
Loud enough that people standing around could hear it.
_________________ Liquid Force Kiteboarding in the Pacific Northwest.
Demo's always available to those on this forum.. PM me to schedule. |
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Chooch

Since 18 Nov 2007
1871 Posts
Wicked Pissah
Boston Tea Bagger
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Mon Aug 18, 08 8:02 am |
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| Ask Ben Franklin.....I think if your out on the water you are a huge target for Lightning(kite 90' off the water with nothing else around).....either way I don't want to find out the hard way
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Spike

Since 13 May 2007
1414 Posts
Alameda
Spelling Expert
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Mon Aug 18, 08 8:14 am |
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| Chooch wrote: | | Ask Ben Franklin..... | Touché
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tinyE

Since 21 Jan 2006
2004 Posts
not really an
XTreme Poster
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Mon Aug 18, 08 8:20 am |
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but didn't ben franklin tie a key to his kite string? He didn't get shocked, but his key did...
so how would electricity strike a kite anyway? There's nothing conductive in it is there? Can our kite lines actuaclly conduct electriciy? Even with that...though the carbon fiber bar is somewhat conductive, the rubber around the grips should insluate you.
I have no idea what he was feeling, but it seems more likely that his body was passing through the charged air particles and creating static charge, but what do i know?
does anyone have a scientific explanation?
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forrest

Since 21 Jun 2005
4330 Posts
Hood River
Hick
CGKA Member
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Mon Aug 18, 08 8:22 am |
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| Air doesn't conduct, but lightening finds a way through it. Kite, lines, and bar are all better conductors than air. It's the path of least resistance.
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Chooch

Since 18 Nov 2007
1871 Posts
Wicked Pissah
Boston Tea Bagger
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Mon Aug 18, 08 8:26 am |
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| Forrest wrote: | | Air doesn't conduct, but lightening finds a way through it. Kite, lines, and bar are all better conductors than air. It's the path of least resistance. |
Same reason why wood is a bad conductor, but trees still get hit by lightning quite often.
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Spike

Since 13 May 2007
1414 Posts
Alameda
Spelling Expert
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Mon Aug 18, 08 8:28 am |
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lines could hold some moisture, and possibly trap the ionized air (O3 - Ozone) which itself is conductive. In open air the ozone can get blown around and it could make it difficult for the lightning to find a complete path to the ground (hence lightning rarely forms a straight path through the atmosphere). If the ozone forms between the fibers of the lines, it is somewhat trapped and will be more likely to provide a complete path to the ground. Moisture will definitely aid in this, especially on the coast because salt water is WAY more conductive than fresh water because the salt dissolves into ions, which are conductive.
btw, ozone is created by the charge differential between two molecules, so great charge differentials tend to create paths of ozone which eventually conduct electricity (lightning)
Last edited by Spike on Mon Aug 18, 08 8:29 am; edited 1 time in total |
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scottman
Since 08 Jun 2007
150 Posts
hillsboro
Stoked
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Mon Aug 18, 08 8:29 am |
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| Similar experience Sunday too. I was salmon fishing off the Astoria coast when our VHF antenna started crackling like a high voltage power line with static electricity. My wifes hair was standing straight up in the air! This is a sign the cloud looking for a low resistance discharge path but does not have enough charge to send down a bolt. My buddy grabs his gaffing hook (non-conductive wood handle) to lower the antenna without getting shocked. We decided to get out of there. Before we could reel our lines in I lock into a 30lb king with a highly conductive graphite rod standing in an aluminum boat. There was no lightning strikes close to us but it sure felt imminent.
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Gman

Since 11 Feb 2006
4911 Posts
Portland
Unstrapped
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Mon Aug 18, 08 9:58 am |
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Scarry shit
More fun with weather
Was fishing the flats in keys - wading with a 9' fly rod in the middle of a 2 sq mile flat of 6 inch water. Some black clouds roll by (a few miles away) - I lift up the rod and I hear this buzzing sound - ignore it for a while - kinda weird - must be imagining things
I lower the rod and it stops, raise the rod it starts again and gets louder, do this a few times, before i wise up and boogie.
Heard stories of the fly line hanging suspended in the air while guys are fishing.
Guess this is not so uncommon that or all fishermen all full of shit
http://fieldandstream.blogs.com/flytalk/2008/08/lightning-struc.html
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| Baked Flyrod |
lightningrod.jpg |
_________________ Go Deep!
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=eu2pBpQolKE |
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tinyE

Since 21 Jan 2006
2004 Posts
not really an
XTreme Poster
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Mon Aug 18, 08 10:18 am |
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| Gman wrote: | or all fishermen all full of shit
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this pretty much describes all fisherman I know... myself included (when fishing)
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chanson

Since 31 Jan 2006
1874 Posts
WISCONSIN
Chimey
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Mon Aug 18, 08 10:53 am |
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| Quote: | | Can our kite lines actuaclly conduct electriciy? |
When I was a noob, I was flying my 20m LF flight kite(2-line with the huge bridal) in a soccer field and crashed it onto power lines!!
Our bright idea was to make this long arm out of 2 rakes, duct tape a razor blade to the end, and cut my bridle(cause I was converting it to 4-line anyways). Stand on a huge ladder and cut it down.
After we got most of thebridal cut, the kite was hanging low enough wo we could grab it...not a good idea I know. That spectra bridle-line was def. conducting some sort of electric current...didn't really "shock" ,but you could feel the tingle when you touched it.
so we cut it off completely before grabbing it agian.
_________________ Shallow Dive Design, 2nd Wind Sports, Airush, Trident Sports |
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Reaper356

Since 10 Dec 2006
781 Posts
Salem / LC Oregon
Opinionated
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Mon Aug 18, 08 11:33 am |
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As far as lightning and electricity goes, I always think of voltage as electricity's ability to jump gaps and Amps as electricity's ability to blow things to peices...
Multiply and you have power...
If you can jump a gap w/ ions in the air, the organics in the kitelines are going to have enough polarization that they can temporarily ionize... this effect doesn't last for long because your lines will burn in half because they pose a lot of Resistance (which gives off heat). The electricity is going to kill you in a split second, then burn your lines half way back to the kite while it's jumping to ground!
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Sid

Since 31 Mar 2008
83 Posts
Right behind you.
Â
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Mon Aug 18, 08 1:30 pm |
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A was flying a 2m foil kite on standing in wet grass a few years ago with a electrical storm going off about 30 miles South of me when I started feeling a tingle in my hands and my hairs stand up. When I loosend the grip on my bar the tingles would increase in intensity and I could hear an audible electrical crackeling noise. I couldn't put my kite down fast enough.
When I was a kid I had that happen to me once when I was mowing a golf course during an electrical storm and two seconds later I heard the most defening crack you could fathom and my vision went white for about ten seconds. I'm pretty certain a bolt hit the mower I was riding or at least the ground next to me. I wasn't about to stick around to see if that would happen twice.
_________________ Seamonkey |
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