South Africa is well known for its dramatic lightning and thunderstorms. These can be disruptive and dangerous, especially for outdoor facilities such as sports facilities like golf courses and sports fields, and beyond these, for remote utility installations such as water treatment plants, power transmission substations, and mining sites. Severe thunderstorms and lightning strikes raise risks for personnel as well as equipment and protection measures are essential.

Biral (UK), now part of the Senseca Group, specialises in environmental and meteorological measurement instrumentation. It has recently launched its BTD-200 lightning warning system, which is a complete detection and warning system.
Senseca South Africa Managing Director, Jan Grobler says the BTD-200 delivers where many other systems fail due to its professional aviation grade lightning technology. “The proven BTD-200 system is compact, easy to install and does not rely on secondary measurements in order to activate the warning system. Its highly specialised technology delivers the warning as soon as lightning is detected.”
The BTD-200 offers detection technology that reliably detects the presence of all forms of lightning in a range of up to 35 km from the sensor. The sensor, which is quick and easy to install, is supplied complete with a universal mains voltage power supply and the essential PC server application ‘Lightning Works’ for monitoring, warning and data logging of approaching thunderstorms.
“For lightning detection requirements of over 35 kilometres, Biral also supplies the BTD-300 Series, which can reliably detect and range cloud-to-cloud lightning over a range of 83 kilometres, exceeding the US FAA requirements. The BTD-300 works on an electrostatic operating principle which enables the sensor to warn of the risk of overhead lightning before the first discharge occurs. Cloud-to-cloud strikes are typically much more common than cloud-to-ground strikes,“ Grobler says.
When lightning discharge occurs, there is a significant transfer of electric charge which causes a disturbance in the atmospheric electric field that is detectable to a distance of more than 100 km. This low frequency disturbance is detected by the BTD-200 antenna and the signal is processed to detect and range the lightning discharge. Importantly, the BTD-200 can issue a warning of potential overhead lightning before the first strike. This is not possible using radio-based detection systems.
Key benefits of the BTD-200
- Fully automatic alarm triggering
- Warning of the most dangerous (overhead) lightning risk before the first lightning strike
- Advanced, automatic self-testing to ensure system operation
- An accurate 35 km detection range
- Performance in accordance with IEC 62793 for a Class A detector
- Compliance with EN 50536:2011+/A1:2012 for a Class 1 detector
- Detection of cloud-to-ground, intra-cloud and cloud-to-cloud lightning
- Detection of charged precipitation and strong atmospheric electric fields
- The detector is supplied with Lightning Works server software.
“The BTD-200 can significantly improve safety on industrial sites and it supports professional meteorological applications. The system filters out the higher frequency electromagnetic radio waves, which are often the cause of sensor confusion and false alarms on standard systems. The BTD-200 instrumentation has practically a zero false alarm rate.” says Grobler.
For more information visit: https://www.senseca.com/