Antenna Damage
Mike, Arlyn, and Dick: Please take a look at the photo that I attached. This shows my VHF antenna that I removed from my C-22 at the end of last summer. The tip used to have a little white plastic cap on it, and you can see from the inset photo, that the tip was damaged. The stainless steel wire also looks like it was melted a little. I'm familiar with machining processes, and it didn't get this way from any machining process, it almost has a little ball on the tip, like it may have melted. The base of the antenna had a vinyl boot covering it. You can see that the boot is missing, and that the dielectric was blown apart. I think I know when this happened. We were on the boat and it was raining like crazy. I was in the cockpit with my older son, and my wife and my younger son were in the cabin. They said that they heard a spark inside the boat. Lightning was striking nearby, and the thunder was very loud. We were anchored in Middle River. As Dick said, I always tell everyone not to sit near the shrouds. This isn't the first time that we heard a spark (sound) inside our boat during a thunderstorm. (We were anchored the other times too). Anyhow, a few weeks after this storm, we were sailing our boat just before pulling it out of the water before Hurricane Isabel. I tried to get a weather report on the VHF, and it didn't work. I still don't know if the radio survived. I doubt that it did. I have a handheld radio that I plan on using next summer. Has anyone ever seen this type of damage before? It doesn't really bother me. VHF radios are cheap. No one was hurt, and the boat was undamaged. Mike, thanks for asking the question. I have wanted to take a photo of the antenna and post it to see what others have to say about it. Aldo