Can insulating pads under your jacks help prevent lightning damage? Part 1
Part 1 of my study on RV grounding in a lightning storm
Staying safe in a lightning storm: Part 1
Can insulating pads under your leveling jacks help reduce damage to your RV’s electrical system from a nearby lightning ground strike?
I’m beginning to study this concept just in time for lightning season. For many years I made the claim that insulating pads under your RV jack stands would do nothing to protect your RV from electrical damage in the event of a direct lightning strike. And I believe that is still true, having performed a recent insurance inspection for a $500,000 coach that suffered a direct lightning strike on its roof.
However, for every direct strike, there are probably hundreds of smaller lightning ground strikes in the area that energizes the campground wiring. And it’s possible that insulating jack pads could prevent something I’m now referring to as a whiplash effect through the ground and where a DC pulse lightning current damages more of your electrical system due to secondarily grounding your RV, rather than insulating it from the ground. Join me as I begin to study this phenomenon and review technical papers on how insulating your leveling jacks might reduce electrical damage to your RV.
Here’s a screenshot of the video that got me interested in the effect, and why I contacted SnapPad about the possibility that their jack pads may provide extra protection for your RV’s electronics from nearby lightning ground hits. Note that when lightning hits the earth it doesn’t go straight down. Instead it takes multiple paths across the earth in varying depths in an attempt to find true earth ground.
Do jack stands ground your RV?
Now let’s imagine that your RV is sitting on its metal jack stands on the wet ground, so it has a fairly good connection there. These jack pads are acting like a secondary grounding rod (albeit a rather small one). Now instead of the lightning electrical pulse coming into your RV from the pedestal, what if the DC pulse comes across the earth, is picked up by your grounded jack stands, and then tries to leave your RV via your shore power ground connection in the pedestal. I can only imagine that will wreak havoc with all of your expensive RV electronics.
What about insulating pads?
Now as I’ve noted many times before, nothing can stand in the way of a direct lightning hit to your RV, and only a metal-skin RV can shield the occupants (you) from the lightning going directly through your RV. But I do believe that insulating pads can reduce and possibly eliminate damage to your RV electronics if lightning hits nearby and you’re still plugged into shore power.
This is just a preliminary announcement of a study that’s now being funded by SnapPad. They’ve commissioned me to create a report on what I find, good or bad. So watch for more updates to my study as we get into lightning season soon and I find more papers and studies on this effect. Now if only I could build a 30-foot-tall Tesla coil in the back yard to make a real lightning simulator. And then I have to find someone to loan me their RV. We shall see….
Let’s stay heart safe out there… Mike
Mike - We were hit by lightning on July 1st, 2018, while staying at John Gurney Park in Hart, Michigan. The strike caused about $7K in damage to our Tundra. I also had to replace the power supply module and the shoreline power cord plug in our 2008 Jayco BH19 trailer. The lightning hit the tall tree next to us, passing into the Tundra parked about 2 feet beside the tree. The lightning then passed to the trailer parked a couple of feet beside the truck and out of the power supply cord into the campground's pedestal, disabling it. It also passed out of the truck from the bottom of the tailpipe and the towing hitch, blowing a 4-inch diameter hole into the concrete pad the trailer was sitting on. We were sleeping at the time, but the vehicles were not insulated in any way other than their respective tires. We had to fight State Farm to cover this, as they didn't see any immediate evidence of a strike. Both vehicles are still in service today. I have pictures and additional information if it would be helpful to you. - Jim
What about other substances under the jacks, such as wood or one of the various plastic blocks, such as lynx leveling blocks, home on wheels blocks etc.?