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Lightning strike leaves train passengers stranded (From News Shopper)
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Southeastern services plus Victoria and Waterloo stations affected by freak lightning strike in Wandsworth
9:09am Friday 20th April 2012 in Dartford & Swanley news By Mark Chandler
Lightning strike leaves train passengers stranded
THOUSANDS of travellers were left stranded on trains and station platforms yesterday evening after a lightning strike damaged signalling equipment.
Network Rail said the lightning hit a power substation in south Wandsworth at around 5.30pm which triggered a power surge disrupting signalling for Victoria and Waterloo stations.
Victoria station suffered the worst disruption with the Southeastern side closed down and no trains running via Herne Hill.
Disgruntled commuters were forced to take buses and taxis to complete their journeys.
A spokesman for Network Rail said traction problems were not fixed until around 10pm, with engineers working through the night to get services up and running again this morning.
Comments(9)
nigel1
says...
10:02am Fri 20 Apr 12
Empirecook
says...
10:57am Fri 20 Apr 12
For lightining to strike, it strikes the highest thing. (which is why tall buildings usually have a means of earthing). So the only way this would happen is if the sub-station was to be in the middle of nowhere...which for wandsworth, is hard to believe.
HughJarrs
says...
11:09am Fri 20 Apr 12
bnorther
says...
11:31am Fri 20 Apr 12
Empirecook wrote:That's simply is not true. Lighting will follow the course of least resistance to earth (note: electrical earth is not the same as ground level, its a ref of near zero voltage, with a near infinite sink, at least in theory) for cloud/earth lightning.
Anyone else notice the failure here?
For lightining to strike, it strikes the highest thing. (which is why tall buildings usually have a means of earthing). So the only way this would happen is if the sub-station was to be in the middle of nowhere...which for wandsworth, is hard to believe.
This often is a tall building, as the often is a copper "rod" which will be earthed.
But, its relatively common for lightning to strike the ground, even where there are trees and poles close by.
A big electricity sub station will be full of nice easy routes to earth, so will be more likely to be struck than much of the surrounding area. Unfortunately the surge caused will have tripped many surge protectors within it and blown many fuses, and possibly destroyed lots of equipment as well. Even a non direct hit can cause serious damage. I was in charge of an IT dept a while back. A strike hit a tree about 500m away, and despite of some very expensive protection of the computer room, there were many electrical items that were fried.
Have a look at this site:
http://stormhighway.
com/lightning_always
_strikes_tallest_obj
ect_myth.shtml
jaded1
says...
5:57pm Fri 20 Apr 12
IMakeSense
says...
6:47pm Fri 20 Apr 12
Just you wait 'til London Bridge is closed. That will be fun, won't it?
Oh, how glad I am that I don't commute. Been there, done it, got the T-shirt.
dave76
says...
2:02pm Sat 21 Apr 12
mumcabs
says...
3:58pm Sat 21 Apr 12
bothered44 says...
9:28am Fri 20 Apr 12