So if the 4 foot rods I bought on clearance from MCM are not legal why do so many places still sell them? I did a little reading and lots of HAM radio guys use them in arrays to ground their towers. Those guys are usually educated about electronics so why would they not install to code.
I never installed them and I get the feeling grounding my antennas would make them more of a lightning target. They are ten feet below the roof peak on a chimney and at least 50 feet from the nearest tree that is 70 feet tall. I always felt it was a low risk that they would be struck by lightning.
That isn't how a lightning rod works. The theory is that a low resistance path to a solid ground will discharge before a large charge accumulates. The higher the resistance, the higher the voltage before the arc occurs and the higher the current passing through the ground path. An ungrounded antenna still has a path to earth ground, but it is through a relatively high resistance of wet wood, shingles, etc so the charge will be a lot higher before it discharges. Since we are talking a very large capacitor in that cloud, a big bunch of current is going to flow through everthing in its path, and that is your TV, DVR, house wiring, modem and anything else that gets in the way.
So, to say it another way, the low resistance ground path is not to handle all the current of a lightning strike, but to encourage the potential to discharge well before it gets to that point.