XPost: alt.engineering.electrical
On 08/08/2017 07:07 PM, Michael Moroney wrote:
There was an incident like that when I was a kid on a lake where we had a cabin. The lake level was high and a sail boat lost control and drifted or was blown where power distribution lines passed near the shore line (over
the water at the time), its mast struck the overhead distribution line and two people were killed. The newspaper story reported the distribution
line voltage was 4800 volts. That power line and another one that passed over a channel were moved shortly thereafter.
Hello, and your story, while tragic, isn't anything new. There's a
number of instances over the decades where a metallic conductor (antenna
mast, etc) from a ground vehicle came into contact with an overhead
medium voltage distribution line and people were either killed or
seriously injured. In some instances where the vehicle was insulated
from earth via its tires the occupant(s) was able to jump clear of the
vehicle and survive. Given that many of today's MV lines on utility
poles have line-to-earth potentials of 19 kV or higher, maintaining a
safe clearance distance can't be overstated. Sincerely,
--
J. B. Wood e-mail:
[email protected]
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