Hope you don’t mind if I join this discussion, I disagree with many things HaminX is posting here. I could be wrong of course.
For disclosure fairness, I am an electrical engineer and am involved with a company who has a patent related to sailboat lightning protection.
What do some of the experts say on the static dissipaters?
http://www.marinelightning.com/AirTerminals.htm#DAS
“In his paper, Dr. Mousa concludes that “Natural downward lightning flashes cannot be prevented.” His phraseology “natural downward lightning” is carefully chosen, but does cover the case of a sailboat mast. Perhaps the reason why these devices are still popular is the rave review they get from the telecommunications industry. When a dissipater is at the top of a telecommunication tower on a mountain it does appear to lower the incidence of lightning strikes that originate at the tower, that is upward lightning. Unfortunately, this is only applicable to this type of lightning, which is not the type the predominantly strikes boats, or other structures on a flat earth. “
What does Don Casey say about the dissipaters?
http://www.sailnet.com/forums/gear-main ... tions.html
The theory is that the point or points of these devices—called static dissipaters—bleed off the charge from the grounded mast, thus lowering the voltage differential below what is required to "spark" lightning. Dissipaters probably do bleed off static charges, but trying to bleed the ocean's charge into the air with a dissipater on your mast is like trying to lower the ocean's level with a soda straw.
My note – I think Don Casey is on the mark here – we can discuss this more. Before a strike, a dissipater can deal with the charge buildup (caused by electric fields from charge in the clouds – not charge coming up from the water). Some what like using a bucket to collect the water from a very small flow in a gutter. But as the lightning strike is coming down with enormously high and fast changing electric fields, the dissipater is still like having a bucket but now you are trying to fight off a large ocean wave – your efforts are not going to make any difference.
Haminx wrote “Ever wonder why the old dead snag is the one that gets struck in the middle of a healthy forest? The leaves and needles of the live trees are acting as dissipaters. The old dead snag is radiating the charge from just a few points. Fewer points, same amount of charge. It's like waving a flag at the clouds and saying, "Here I am, kick me".
I come to a slightly different conclusion here (from seeing dead trees which were hit by lightning) – the lightning strike killed the tree.
Hammin wrote “Sorry, the charge is coming from the water and crawling up the outside of your hull to start with.”
Not correct, the hull of a sailboat is an insulator. The charging experienced on a sailboat mast and shrouds is due to the electric fields present because of charge in the clouds. It is NOT due to charge coming up from the water.
Does grounding increase your chances of getting a strike (as Hammin X says it does)
http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/sg071 (Dr. Ewen Thomson)
there is no support for the argument presented by some sailors that they should not ground their sailboat since it will increase the chances of it being struck by lightning.
Also,
http://www.marinelightning.com/catamara ... oatUSStats
The info here shows that Catamarans have twice the claims for lightning strikes compared to monohuls. What is interesting about this is that most monohulls do have grounding through a keel but Catamarans do not have heavy metal keels or the grounding.
If you are drawing wild conclusion from this, it would be that NOT grounding increases your chance of getting struck. This is likely an incorrect conclusion but it does say that other factors are likely more important than grounding or not.
I also don’t agree that if you ground, you have to ground everything. This conclusion would be based on grounding increasing your chances of getting struck. I don’t believe this is true. If its not true, them simply grounding your mast only gives you maybe 75% of the benefits of grounding. Adding the shrouds increases this even more.