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I can't see a good reason for making the circuit longer than it needs to be though. It makes sense to continue the vertical strips all the way to the ground in one.
Because you need to protect the whole building.
A metal frame under a tiled roof on a building erected 90 odd years ago? I don't think so.It's a traditional construction, brick, with tiles on wooden rafters. The span's only one classrom plus one corridor wide.
old-fashioned heavy iron down-pipes from the gutters
Horizontal Lightning Conductors
That is why lightning down-conductors are made of a braid of many fine wires
"Skin effect" means that high-frequency components (like lightning impulses) only travel through a thin skin on the outside of the conductor.- That is why lightning down-conductors are made of a braid of many fine wires (with a large surface area) instead of one big conductor.
"Lightning impulse" - I'll guess it's not genuine AC with Voltage swings from +V to -V many times. I'll assume it's a single DC spike, from 0 (volts or amps) to +Vmax (or +Amax ) and back to 0 over a short time interval. I've never really looked at a Lightning strike and seen it as a plot of Voltage (or Current) vs. time, maybe it has mutiple sinusoidal components with different frequencies.