Well, perhaps the lightning rods where you are tend to be two or three meters in length, with huge cables. From my experience, in the USA, they tend to be about one foot long (slightly less than one third of a meter), with both the rod and the cable being only a couple of centimeters in diameter. Not only are they less noticeable than what you describe, they are also standard on large commercial buildings, and not unknown on houses, so they are common enough to have little value as a landmark.
-------Original Email------- Subject :Re: [OSM-newbies] tag for "lightning conductor" (pararayosin spanish) From :mailto:[email protected] Date :Tue Oct 12 04:28:02 America/Chicago 2010 En/na MichaĆ Borsuk ha escrit: > On 10/06/2010 07:01 PM, Xan wrote: >> En/na Richard Weait ha escrit: >>> On Tue, Oct 5, 2010 at 9:02 AM, Xan > >> For the other hand, it could be lightning conductors without any >> structure below: I live near a place (amenity=pedestrian, area=yes) with >> a lightning conductor in the middle 8-| And in many mountains they are >> near communication installations. > > They are not very useful as routing points. > > LMB > Why not? A huge cable with 2 or 3 meters of length in a top of building is a thing you could see clearly. Xan. _______________________________________________ newbies mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/newbies Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry _______________________________________________ newbies mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/newbies

