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You are out for a ride and a storm blows in.
Should you ride
out the storm?
If not, what should you do?
No doubt you have heard that because your tires
are made of rubber, and because rubber is not a good electrical conductor,
so long as you keep your feet on the pegs lightning will not hit you since
it cannot find a path to ground through you and the bike.
WRONG!!!
Though rubber is a pretty good insulator at the normal voltage levels
we mere humans deal with, it is not very effective against the voltage
in a lightning bolt.
On the other hand, you may also have heard that if a lightning bolt hits
a car the occupants are safe because the car is riding on rubber tires,
etc. Actually, this is almost true! So long as the occupants stay away
from anything metal they will more than likely survive a lightning hit
without any injury whatever.
What protects occupants of a cage is not their rubber tires, but the
fact that they are enclosed in a metal container. If a lightning bolt
hits the surface of the car it spreads around the occupants, NOT THROUGH
THEM, and goes to ground.
A lightning bolt that hits you or your motorcycle is a different matter
entirely.
Here’s the magnitudes we are dealing with here. The master fuse
on your bike handles about 30 amps before it blows. An average lightning
bolt produces a current of about 20,000 amps. Even 30 amps can easily
kill you because it disrupts your heart's electrical system and the heart
then simply stops working. Your heart doesn't stand a chance against a
lightning bolt.
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