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Repair & ImproveLIGHTNING STORM SAFETYKnow how to protect your family, home and belongings before lightning strikesby Tom Kraeutler, AOL Home Improvement Editor
Tom Kraeutler is the Home Improvement Editor for AOL. In this column, Tom offers tips on surviving a lightning storm. Thunder and lightning storms are fairly common occurrences in the U.S. With the impressive show they put on, it can be easy to forget their dangers and the damage they do. Every year around 25 million storm-associated cloud-to-ground lightning strikes occur in this country and they’re second only to floods among weather-related threats to life and limb. Lightning is also responsible for about $5 billion in annual economic impact resulting from the property and systems damage it causes. Getting to a safe, grounded shelter is the best way to protect yourself as a thunderstorm approaches, but the danger can continue once you’re inside. To protect your family, home and belongings, here are the steps you can take now to make your home a damage and danger-proof zone. Whole-home protection systems The three main LPS components are air terminals, conductors, and ground electrodes. Air terminals, also known as lightning rods, are placed at intervals on a home’s roof and any high points projecting from it, and are designed so that lightning strikes them instead of the building. Conductors are the cables that run from among the air terminals to the ground electrodes, where lightning’s charge is sent safely into the earth. For thorough lightning protection, you’ll also need a complete network of connections which could include vent fans, gutters, water pipes, home electrical systems, phone lines and other vital connections. Between this and the tricky rooftop LPS installation requirements, it’s best to get the help of an experienced installer to set up your system. Pros are also needed to install surge arrestors, which protect your wiring and electrical equipment should a lightning-induced power surge travel down a power line toward your home. Surge arrestors are installed either outside where the electric service enters a building or at the inside service entrance, supplying a ground so that a power surge can’t enter the structure. Indoor safety during a storm
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