Saved by my iPod: Girl survives lightning strike after wire diverts 300,000 volts

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  • gmb45

    #1

    Saved by my iPod: Girl survives lightning strike after wire diverts 300,000 volts

    a very lucky girl eh

    A teenage girl survived a terrifying lightning strike after she was saved by the wire of her iPod.

    Schoolgirl Sophie Frost and her boyfriend Mason Billington, both 14, stopped to shelter under a tree when a storm struck as they were walking near their homes.

    Doctors believe Sophie survived the 300,000-volt surge only because it travelled through the gadget?s wire, diverting it away from her vital organs.
    Sophie Frost

    Scorched: Sophie Frost, 14, shows what happened to her clothes when she and her boyfriend Mason Billington were struck by lightning

    The teenager was taken to hospital and is recovering from burns to her chest and legs while Mason suffered damage to his eyes.

    Both are expected to make a full recovery and Sophie may not even have a permanent scar.
    Sophie Frost

    Sophie, on her hospital bed, said she was saved by headphone wires diverting the bolt away from her body

    She will be thankful she was wearing her iPod, which she had been given four days earlier as a gift from her grandmother.

    Returning from hospital yesterday after three days of treatment, she said: ?I?m just glad to be alive. I don?t remember a thing about what happened, but from what everyone tells me it?s a miracle I?m still here.

    ?Everybody?s said the iPod must have diverted the lightning away from my body, which probably saved my life. I?ve got a few burns, but it?s all healing OK.?

    Sophie and Mason were knocked unconscious by the lightning bolt while holding hands and taking shelter in a field on Monday night.

    Mason came round and carried Sophie, who was scorched and unconscious, to a nearby road where he flagged down a female motorist who took the couple to Southend hospital.
    Apple iPod

    The iPod had been bought by Sophie's grandmother only a few days before the lightning strike

    Sophie suffered burns to her body and legs, some temporary damage to her eyes and a perforated eardrum.

    Dr Ian Cotton, a reader in electrical engineering at Manchester University, said Sophie could have been saved by her iPod.

    ?If lightning hits a person it can do one of two things. It can go down the outside of the skin, which is more likely if someone is caught in a storm and their body is wet.

    ?Or it can puncture the skin and go into the body. Potentially a metal wire, which is highly conductive could divert the electricity away from the heart and save someone?s life.?

    Sophie was reunited with her boyfriend and family in Rayleigh, Essex, yesterday after being transferred to the Broomfield Hospital for burns treatment.

    She said Mason, whose eyesight is now back to normal, was a hero. ?My mum thinks he?s wonderful,? she added.
  • djsonicaus
    Newbie
    • Jun 2009
    • 1

    #2
    hehe might go get an ipod

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    • on_the_jazz
      DK Veteran
      • Jul 2008
      • 557

      #3
      Sounds like it was the earphones which helped. Any excuse to add the word "ipod" to stories.

      Comment

      • daithi
        V.I.P. Member
        • May 2009
        • 2586

        #4
        ya i here she was listening to thunderstruck by acdc

        Comment

        • .: JaCkPoT :.
          Retired Sat TV Addict
          • Aug 2008
          • 5607

          #5
          i might just wear earphones all around me when i go out next on a stormy day

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          • chroma
            V.I.P. Member
            • Feb 2009
            • 1976

            #6
            OH SHI-!!!!
            LOOK THERES LIGHTNING AND THUNDER, LETS GO HIDE UNDER THIS BIG WET CONDUCTIVE THING! THATS BOUND TO BE A GOOD IDEA.

            Back in school we got drilled to avoid trees in a stor for the very reason that hanging around anything remotely approximating a lightning rod would be a very bad idea.

            Either find somewhere insulated to stand on or get as flat and low as possable, remove absoloutly anything conductive which will act as an attracor, IPOD's are nice and metallic so you might want to get rid of those pronto. and place those higher than yourself go give the clouds a better target than yourself.
            This was drilled into me in Primary School and even secondary school.

            Ive been inside a storm cloud, i was sitting a mountain leadership course up in the cairngorms and its been one of the most terrifying experiences of my life.

            Lying on my rucksack with my axes as rods placed a fair distance away from me with my crampons, wet ropes and rigging, just lying there bricking it for a few freezing cold hours. watching the rest of the group doing the same through the haze of the insides of a thunder cloud.
            Its horrible when gaps open up and your instructor, the guy who's supposed to be fully trained no less. looks absoloutly terrified.
            Whats even scarier is that despite the cold and humidity you can feel the fizzing static electricity buzz crawling all over you. Then needing a leak, but figuring that getting struck in the dick by a lighting bolt is too high a price to pay for the comfort of an empty bladder

            This is coincedentaly the first time ever i think ive tried to drink myself into a coma and the last time ive ever trusted a forecast of cloudy with a chance of drizzle.
            He who laughs last thinks slowest.

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