Answers to the most common questions
Lightning Protection FAQ
The light you see in the sky from a flash of lightning travels at 186,000 miles per second (~670 million miles per hour). But lightning itself travels nowhere near as fast as the speed of light. Although it moves at different speeds during different stages of its journey, lightning moves at approximately 3,700 miles per second (~13.3 million miles per hour).
Thunder travels at the speed of sound, which is relatively much slower at ~760 miles per hour. So you can quickly figure how far you are from the lightning flash by timing the pause between seeing the flash and hearing the thunder. When you see the flash, begin counting the seconds. Every five seconds equals ~1 mile in distance. So if you count 10 seconds between seeing the flash and hearing the thunder, you are about 2 miles away from the strike.
Five percent of all commercial insurance claims are lightning related. Lightning can strike anywhere. Every structure has an internal network of viable pathways for lightning to travel as it flashes its way from the sky to the ground. Gas and water pipes, electric lines, phone lines, cable TV/internet lines, gutters, downspouts, and metal window frames all are willing and able conductors for the lightning express. The NFPA “780 Risk Assessment Guide” is a useful tool in evaluating the vulnerability of a structure.
Ironically, power strips are powerless to prevent damage to electrical equipment. Professionally installed lightning-surge protection systems that include quality surge suppressors stand out as a difference-maker. A lighting rod can save you thousands of dollars in replacement costs. In fact, lightning rods could save your home and business.
