Please, please, it's a Static Discharger!
Hey Coffee:We have one too, and in four years of bad electrical storms on the Alabama Gulf, we have not been hit. Like Randy, we have had close calls, but the boat has never been hit.The theory is that the multiple pointy wires cause the positive charge on your boat (which builds up when a big negative charge moves in overhead) to be dissipated in all directions, thus preventing one large positive-ion streamer forming off the top of your mast and heading straight up to the cloud, thus facilitating a negative lightning stroke to follow the streamer back down from the cloud to your mast.The only lightining damage to our boat happenned when the pole transformer out on the street was hit, and a very large surge came into our house wiring, and also went down the shore power cable and went aboard the boat. On the boat we lost two GFI AC outlets, the microwave, the inverter, and we had to relocate the autopilot's fluxgate compass (the lightning surge magnetized a bunch of stuff near the shore-power wiring).Fair winds and gentle seas,Al CarlsonWings of DawnC36 # 2059