[AT] Tractor Lightning Strike?

Cecil Bearden crbearden at copper.net
Tue Jul 13 22:04:32 PDT 2021


The same lightning strike that fried the atv winch solenoid, also hit 
while our air conditioner, clothes dryer, and hot water tank were 
running.  It shorted all three.
Cecil

On 7/13/2021 11:14 PM, Spencer Yost wrote:
> Lightning struck my shop while I was in the office in the house next 
> to the shop.  I had just finished the shop and nothing was in it 
> except a halogen light stand and some tools and materials as I was 
> finishing up some small details ; preparing to move everything in.
>
> It did two things. First was, it tripped a GFCI receptacle in the shop 
>  You would expect that right?  Except  it was the courtesy GFCI 
> receptacle on the halogen light stand (not part of the building 
> circuit) and that stand was NOT  plugged in at all. Figured that out 
> the next day when I tried to plug in a drill to the light stand.  The 
> next thing it did was to turn on my flatbed scanner - like I had hit 
> the button on the front to take a scan.  It took a very nice scan of 
> an empty bed. By the way it was so close to me all I heard was a 
> concussion, not really a thunder clap and all I saw was blue light 
> around me.   Pretty spooky.
>
> If anyone wants proof, I will take a picture of the burn mark where 
> the strike must’ve hit the peak of the roof and ran in on a flood 
> light to ground.  It left a burn mark on the vinyl soffit as it 
> traveled from the gutter across the soffit to the flood light.   It is 
> there to this day.   It’s also the only flood light whose base has 
> rusted.
>
> So yes - inductive current was generated in two devices in the only 
> lightning strike I was involved it.  So that’s a real thing.
>
> Spencer
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
>> On Jul 13, 2021, at 7:30 PM, Steve Offiler <soffiler at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>  Thx Cecil, and Jim B as well... pointing out that lightning can 
>> induce current in solenoids.  I was going with more of a melted 
>> insulation/shorting hypothesis, but I’m equally inclined to believe 
>> the induction hypothesis.
>>
>> SO
>>
>> Sent from my iPhone
>>
>>> On Jul 13, 2021, at 6:03 PM, Cecil Bearden <crbearden at copper.net> wrote:
>>>
>>> 
>>>
>>> Lightning struck a light pole near my Arctic 366 ATV and stuck the 
>>> winch relay pulling the cable so tight on the drum it had to be cut 
>>> out, and ran the battery down and 2 weeks later the battery had to 
>>> be replaced it was only 3 months old.. Lightning will do strange 
>>> things...
>>>
>>> Cecil
>>>
>>> On 7/13/2021 9:48 AM, Carl Szabelski wrote:
>>>> If it was a lightning strike, there should be some evidence of 
>>>> lightning hitting the tractor. The starter wire should also show a 
>>>> short that allowed the starter to engage. Also, if the starter was 
>>>> engaged due to a short, I would imagine that it was engaged all the 
>>>> time the engine was running and is possibly burned out from being 
>>>> engaged for so long.
>>>>
>>>>  I had the H take off on me once when I tried to do a start and 
>>>> realized that the battery was dead. I connected the jumper cables 
>>>> before before putting it in neutral and as soon as I made the last 
>>>> connection, off it went. Had to jump on while it started heading 
>>>> for the pond. Turns out that I left the kill switch off from the 
>>>> previous start attempt and the starter switch had also stuck in the 
>>>> closed position from the previous start attempt. So when I made the 
>>>> last jumper cable connection, the starter kicked in and off it 
>>>> went. Didn’t realize the starter switch was stuck in the on 
>>>> position until I made the next jumper cable connection, this time 
>>>> in neutral with the kill switch on, and heard the starter engage 
>>>> and run. So it is possible for a tractor to take off if it’s in 
>>>> gear with the kill switch off, and the starter is somehow engaged.
>>>>
>>>> Carl
>>>>
>>>> On Tuesday, July 13, 2021, Stephen Offiler <soffiler at gmail.com 
>>>> <mailto:soffiler at gmail.com>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>     I'm not sure who can see this, but I hope it is available to
>>>>     the general public, whether you have a Facebook account or not...
>>>>
>>>>     https://www.facebook.com/soffiler/posts/10225960016456420
>>>>     <https://www.facebook.com/soffiler/posts/10225960016456420>
>>>>
>>>>     Not MY tractor.  It's on my Facebook page because I'm sharing
>>>>     it.  You can read commentary from the owner, Lapsley Orchard,
>>>>     and you can also see what I came up with.  I am really curious
>>>>     to hear input from ATIS members.
>>>>
>>>>     Steve O.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
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