Ground loops shouldn't be a problem as the APs have transformers that don't use ground at all so there's no ground connection to mess things up.
If lightning is a big issue you might need surge protectors on the lines. Is a Cat6 cable inside a plastic conduit that susceptible to getting hit by lightning though?
Is a Cat6 cable inside a plastic conduit that susceptible to getting hit by lightning though?
IANAE (electrician), but per my understanding, putting copper cable inside a PVC (or other plastic) conduit is among the worst things you can do; it gives the strike only one place to go: down the copper.
That's because you're protecting against the end-point getting hit (in your example a camera) and then using the cable to conduct. But if the APs are inside the buildings that's not what we're protecting against. Instead we're trying to not get the cable itself hit.
On the radio side the cable doesn't have to be susceptible to getting hit by lighting since the radio itself is a big metal thing sticking up in the air. In many cases the cable from the AP down to the PoE injector is the most attractive path for lightning to reach the ground. You can make it less attractive but that often costs money or takes work (See the Motorola R56 Guidelines).
This also goes for ethernet between buildings. Surprisingly enough if the building is poorly grounded the best path can be over your ethernet to a different building.
The ethernet transformers don't really help. They are just another part to get melted off the circuit board if there's a close lightning strike.
Surge protectors pretty much exist as a sacrifice to protect your more expensive electronics (switches and routers).
But I wouldn't put the radios outside now. They're only outside because you need them for backhaul. Since we're running Cat6 I'll just put them inside the buildings as APs as you'd do in your house.
http://ask.metafilter.com/57840/What-kind-of-network-cable-t...
Ground loops shouldn't be a problem as the APs have transformers that don't use ground at all so there's no ground connection to mess things up.
If lightning is a big issue you might need surge protectors on the lines. Is a Cat6 cable inside a plastic conduit that susceptible to getting hit by lightning though?