Why Metal Can Be Safer
Beyond not attracting lightning, metal can actually be a safer roofing material if a strike occurs, and a Wood Wind Landing homeowner benefits from understanding why. Here is the reasoning.
Metal Is Non-Combustible
Metal is non combustible, meaning it does not catch fire, so if lightning strikes a home with a metal roof, the roof is unlikely to ignite, unlike materials that could catch fire. This non combustibility is a safety advantage. The metal will not burn. It resists ignition. It is fire resistant. It does not catch fire.
Lower Fire Risk in a Strike
Because metal does not ignite, the fire risk from a lightning strike is lower with a metal roof than with a combustible roofing material that could be set alight. This lower fire risk is meaningful, since lightning caused fires are a real danger. The risk of fire is reduced. Metal lowers it. It is safer in that respect. It limits the fire danger.
Metal Can Dissipate the Energy
Metal can also help dissipate the energy of a strike, spreading it across the roof rather than concentrating it, which can reduce the impact. This dissipation is another potential safety benefit. Metal spreads the energy. It can reduce concentration. It helps manage a strike. It is an additional advantage.
A Safer Material in a Strike
Taken together, metal's non combustibility and its ability to dissipate energy mean that, if a strike does occur, a metal roof can be a safer choice than a combustible one. Metal offers safety advantages in a strike. It is the safer material. It handles a strike better. It reduces the danger. It is reassuring.
Why Safer, in Short
Metal is non combustible, so if lightning strikes a home with a metal roof, the roof is unlikely to ignite, lowering the fire risk compared to combustible materials, and metal can help dissipate the energy of a strike, so metal can be a safer roofing material if a strike occurs.
It also helps Wood Wind Landing homeowners to know that not only does a metal roof not attract lightning, but if a strike were to occur, a metal roof can actually be the safer roofing material, which turns the common myth almost entirely on its head. There are two reasons for this. The first and most significant is that metal is non combustible, which simply means it does not catch fire. If lightning strikes a home, one of the real dangers is fire, and a roofing material that can catch fire and be set alight poses a greater fire risk in that situation. A metal roof, being non combustible, is unlikely to ignite, so the fire risk from a lightning strike is lower with metal than with a combustible roofing material. Given that lightning caused fires are a genuine danger, this is a meaningful safety advantage. The second reason is that metal can help dissipate the energy of a strike, spreading it across the surface of the roof rather than allowing it to concentrate in one spot, which can help reduce the impact. Taken together, metal's non combustibility and its ability to dissipate energy mean that, in the event of a strike, a metal roof can be a safer choice than a combustible one. It is also worth noting that metal roofing is widely used on homes and buildings everywhere, including in areas that experience a lot of lightning, which reflects the fact that it is considered a safe, sound roofing choice by the industry and by the many people who install it. So the bottom line for a homeowner is genuinely reassuring, the lightning myth is mistaken, metal does not increase the risk of a strike, and metal can actually offer safety advantages if a strike occurs, all of which means a homeowner can choose metal with real peace of mind on this point.
It also helps Wood Wind Landing homeowners to know that not only does a metal roof not attract lightning, but if a strike were to occur, a metal roof can actually be the safer roofing material, which turns the common myth almost entirely on its head. There are two reasons for this. The first and most significant is that metal is non combustible, which simply means it does not catch fire. If lightning strikes a home, one of the real dangers is fire, and a roofing material that can catch fire and be set alight poses a greater fire risk in that situation. A metal roof, being non combustible, is unlikely to ignite, so the fire risk from a lightning strike is lower with metal than with a combustible roofing material. Given that lightning caused fires are a genuine danger, this is a meaningful safety advantage. The second reason is that metal can help dissipate the energy of a strike, spreading it across the surface of the roof rather than allowing it to concentrate in one spot, which can help reduce the impact. Taken together, metal's non combustibility and its ability to dissipate energy mean that, in the event of a strike, a metal roof can be a safer choice than a combustible one. It is also worth noting that metal roofing is widely used on homes and buildings everywhere, including in areas that experience a lot of lightning, which reflects the fact that it is considered a safe, sound roofing choice by the industry and by the many people who install it. So the bottom line for a homeowner is genuinely reassuring, the lightning myth is mistaken, metal does not increase the risk of a strike, and metal can actually offer safety advantages if a strike occurs, all of which means a homeowner can choose metal with real peace of mind on this point.
One point worth making clear for Wood Wind Landing homeowners is that one of the most persistent myths about metal roofing is the idea that a metal roof attracts lightning, and the reassuring truth, supported by the roofing industry and by experts, is that it simply does not. The myth is understandable in its origin, because there is an intuitive association in many people's minds between metal and electricity, since metal conducts electricity, so it can seem logical to assume that a metal roof would somehow draw lightning toward a home. But this intuition is mistaken, because of how lightning actually works. Lightning is determined by factors like a structure's height, its location, and the surrounding terrain, lightning tends to strike taller objects and is influenced by geography, and the material a roof is made of is simply not among the factors that determine whether a home is struck. This means that a home with a metal roof is no more likely to be struck by lightning than the very same home with asphalt shingles or any other roofing material, because the roof type does not affect the odds at all. So the first and most important fact for a homeowner to understand is that choosing metal does not increase the risk of a lightning strike in any way. This is worth knowing because the myth, if left uncorrected, might weigh unnecessarily on a homeowner's decision, leading them to hesitate over a concern that has no basis in fact. Once the facts are understood, the worry simply dissolves, and a homeowner can weigh metal roofing on its genuine merits without this particular fear factoring into the decision at all.
Get a Safer Roofing Material
Wood Wind Landing Metal Roofing installs non combustible metal roofing across Wood Wind Landing and Hamilton County. Call (765) 676-3491 for a free consultation on a metal roof that does not attract lightning and can be safer if a strike occurs.