In This Issue
TECHNICAL PUBLICATION #33A
MODERN COAXIAL LIGHTNING ARRESTORS: ALPHA DELTA VS. I.C.E.
This is a comparison report between coaxial lightning arrestor units manufactured by Alpha Delta Corp.
and Industrial Communication Engineers, Ltd. Both companies make a variety of such protective devices
and are sold worldwide. The I.C.E. design described in this report is protected by a patent issued by the
U.S. Bureau of Patents and Trademarks in Washington, D.C.,
Alpha Delta's primary configuration is a one part system consisting of a gas discharge breakdown unit
connected in a shielded enclosure between the coaxial center conductor and an insulated, external ground
terminal fitting protruding through the case. The gas discharge unit (GDU) has a rated breakdown voltage
in the 400-1000 volt range to allow the transmission of an-RF waveform through the unit without creating a
sufficient voltage potential referenced to ground to ignite the conductor referenced to ground the gas unit
ignites, creating a temporary low resistance path to ground, thus neutralizing the potential.
While this arrangement may be suitable protection in a few cases it suffers from numerous limitations that
we believe to be serious. Among them:
1) The case of the unit that is connected to the coaxial cable outer conductor passes throughout the unit
and no provision is made for grounding the case directly to earth ground. In lightning strike applications,
both direct hits and indirectly (inductively) coupled events, measurement studies have shown that as much
as 80% of the incoming surge flows down the exposed shield of the cable. The unfortunate result is that a
large amount of the strike simply passes across the arrestor chassis and reaches station equipment
frames, dividing between many destructive paths seeking ground.
2) The unit uses a pass-through center conductor. Although the gas discharge assembly will ignite when
the breakdown potential is reached many hundreds of volts are presented to the input of the radio
equipment before the arrestor action occurs. In modem solid state terms it means that the radio will nearly
always be damaged or destroyed before the arrestor activates to neutralize the income electromagnetic
wavefront.
3) The use of a gas discharge unit as a sole-source mechanism for neutralizing lightning currents delivered
by heavy coaxial cable line conductors is controversial. Gas units have only a small dissipative power
rating, seldom exceeding, I watt. While the devices can handle large jolts of thousands of amperes of
current, they can perform that service only if the entire impact event lasts only a few microseconds.
Lightning currents, especially slowed down by time constants due to the inductance of transmission line
conductors are much slower to rise, endure, and dissipate. The result is frequent rupture and failure of the
GDU, requiring down time and parts replacement. Additionally, it's difficult to determine the condition of a
GDU in service, notably after they have taken a few suspected "hits." They don't always go short circuit,
but they sometimes fracture and separate.
4) No constant drain method is employed to leak static development from cables. A coaxial line often acts
like a large capacitor, storing electrical charge which can only leak off the line through antenna joint
connections or through the insulated dielectric region between the conductors. When this occurs it nearly
always causes receiver "hash" noise during electrical activity.
The I.C.E. design, shown below on the right side, took these characteristics into account during
development and testing. Our arrangement uses a central high voltage rated blocking capacitor which
allows the free flow of RF energy through the arrestor device but blocks DC voltage and low frequency AC
voltage. The heavy inductor on the antenna side of the unit is the primary neutralizing agent. Voltage
development is quickly shunted to ground through the DC shorting nature of the inductor/RF choke. If large
currents of a fast-rising nature are presented to the arrestor in such a way that a back-EMF develops
across the inductor then the companion paralleled gas discharge unit ignites, but its only workload is to
collapse the short-lived magnetic field of the inductor., The result is an arrestor that is constantly active,
requires no predetermined voltage to activate, and whose GDU workload is so low that is will probably last
forever. To date not a single replacement gas unit has been sold by us. The added resistance on the
equipment side of the arrestor was inserted to provide a similar drain function on the user side of the
arrestor, shunting away tiny currents that may appear from capacitor dielectric leakage during an impact
event.
Schematic diagrams of the two designs appear below: ©
CBWI
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AUGUST
VOLUME 1
ISSUE 7
UPDATE Industrial Communications Engineers, Ltd. is now Morgan Systems LLC.
Morgan Systems LLC
1745 S. Milestone Dr. #A2
Salt Lake City UT 84104
https://www.surgestop.com