I raise this question only after having read all the forum posts on the topic and several articles from external sites. Yet I am still not clear on what is effective/needed and what is not, sorry. (I can hear the groans from here)
I have a RadarRama antenna mounted on a metal mast connected to my brick chimney about 30' up on my roof. Directly below the antenna is connected the Elad A12-1090 pre-amp, connected to 60 feet of Times Microwave LMR-400, which then connects inside to the AS-1090BT Bias-T. From there a 3 foot LMR-240 cable to the Radar Box.
The LMR-400 coax is not grounded at the entry point to the house via the coax outer screen (yet). The Bias-T is powered by a regulated 12v 800 mA AC adaptor. All computers and PSU's for radios run into line a power conditioner and Tripp-Lite IsoTel surge protectors.
All working brilliantly.
However I live in the mountains and we routinely have very low humidity and high winds - 40 to 50 mph wind gusts are common at night, all night and even higher during some days. Rarely have any rain or thunderstorms.
So far all ok but:
1. Is my Elad Pre-amp protected 'enough' for these wind levels?
2. If other protection is required for the Elad pre-amp or the RB2009, exactly what is it?
I see some posts saying use DC blockers and others indicating they are ineffective.
3. Should I be concerned enough to replace the RadarRama (not at all the best purchase I ever made anyway) with something DC grounded like the SSE 1090SJ mk2, immediately?
4. Does the DC-grounded N-connector on the SSE 1090SJ mk2 affect/prevent me from using the Elad pre-amp? I think there is no actual power into the antenna so should not matter but just asking.
Sorry if this is too detailed or rehashing all this again; I only want to be clear about what I factually need to worry about or not. I am clear on the fact that lightning does what it wants and nothing will guarantee protection there, I just want to avoid stray electrical from winds causing damage.