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Yes, I know, but why would it be a steel frame, it's not a high-rise, and it's not a large span, it's just a traditional building like the vast majority of the others built in that era. And equally importantly, if a steel frame's protecting the building why put a lightning conductor on it.
All the lightning conductors I ever recall seeing are flat copper strips. Braiding it won't make any significant difference to the skin effect because the strands aren't insulated from each other, which is why radio engineers use Litz wire to reduce skin effect. (At MF/HF, above that the usual ploy is to use silver plated copper.)
use tinned copper wire
I think 10mm^2 is rated to about 300amps
but the skin effect is misleading subject, it is only AC related
I doubt very much a thin skin of aluminium is actually conducting such current
Digressing a bit, a novice mistake for radio engineers is to use tinned copper wire, in which most of the current flows through the lossy plating instead of the copper, or bare copper wire, which has the same effect by the time it's oxidised.
rf equipment up to 900mhz
Hi BC, I don't quite understand your last remark. A typical aerial for that frequency is very like a uhf tv aerial but somewhat smaller. The active element in such a yagi is a dipole several inches long and made of aluminium.