Wire Brush Lightning Arrestor
There are some very interesting documents that can be obtained via the internet on lightning and boats. Two documents in particular discuss the physics of lightning and applies this to boats. Both are from the University of Florida in Gainesville.As I understand the issue, a positive charge develops from the water up to the mast top. The clouds provide the negative charge and lightning occurs when these two are strong enoough to cause a transfer. A bolt goes from the bottom up and another comes down from the cloud.When I worked at the FDOT, Bridge Department, we used the "wire brushes" on bascule bridges to protect their electrical systems that opened and shut the bridges. You also see them on high mast lights around airports and alont the interstate system near intersections here in Florida. As I understand it, the system is intended to dissipate the positive charge that accumulates at high points and, ergo, prevents lightning from occuring at that point. The most interesting lightning strike I've seen was on the Sunshine Skyway Bridge across the entrance to Tampa Bay. At the top of each of the two pylons, each about 426 feet above sea level, thre are four lighning rods connected to a very heavy copper wire that goes down into the water. In Tampa Bay there are a lot of lightning storms. However, I once visited the bridge and noticed that the approaches had been hit. This was approximately about half a mile away from one of the tall pylons. The bolt had hit the top of the railing, run through the steel reinforcement in the railing and popped out about 6-7 feet away.