mike,
though i agree that a porcupine could draw off a lightning attack, if you will forgive the terminology, but most inspectors will not recognize this as adequate protection for one's solar setup. if the lightning where to hit the porcupine instead of the pvs, the emp would still be impressed upon the solar setup so more than a porcupine and a good ground wire is needed for some means of stopping it is still warranted. a gas discharge protector may be acceptable to them if the lightning is minimal in the area as was said. there are no guarantees, but they aren't looking to guarantee no damage, but adequate efforts in its suppression or prevention.
though he made no mention of radio equipment that i saw, my using a further analogy to describe why the porcupine is not enough would be like me saying i have a 100ft tree next to my house that goes 60ft higher than my antenna so i won't need any precautions in grounding or suppression efforts for my antenna or solar setups. that would be 100% wrong and it could be said the tree and the porcupine could draw the lightning to the area putting the equipment at risk that way too. i do believe small charges are dissipated by such a device and could reduce the chance of a full strike, but in the event of a full strike it may go straight to the porcupine rather than a quarter mile down the road too.
henry,
yes, i remember our discussions on this and i would expect you to throw in your 2 cents, but i don't think he will be able to convince his inspectors of your argument against grounding the pvs.
also, i have made mention of using diodes as a means of sending higher surges to ground in the past. i've not heard it mentioned anywhere else, but a diode does have a reverse avalanche point they term as piv as you know. diodes do take huge surges too, which is also a plus. your thoughts on this and has anybody heard of the reaction to this type of protection in regards to the nec if they were ever presented with it? yes, the diode may have to be a higher power diode to begin with as in having say a 3-5amps forward or better current rating, but in my view it is viable and comparable to other devices used in protection. a 50piv diode would trip somewhere in and around that 50 volt point making it better than an mov or sov for tripping sooner than the 250v or higher voltage for the mov or sov would trip at. diodes also have other higher piv ratings too for those systems that may need a higher trigger point voltage. gas is best at low trip high current points, but once fired it is useless for another goround for sure. mov/sovs can also burn out or explode too on the first goround as well as a diode, but these 2 types of protection have a better survival capability for a second, 3rd, 4th, etc. shot than the gas does depending on the surge amps flowing.
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