This is because your vehicle is insulated from the ground by its rubber tires. Making it less likely to be struck.
If you lie down in the middle of the street you should be fine, because lightning strikes the highest point. You should also be safe in a car - assuming it has a metal roof.
Stay inside the car
A person is safe from lightning inside a car with a metal body because the metal acts as a Faraday cage. When lightning strikes the car, the metal body acts as a conductor, directing the electrical current around the occupants and safely into the ground, protecting them from electrocution.
I think the question is... 'How can you keep safe in a thunder storm'? If so, stay INDOORS with no metal on you or anything.....NO UMBERELLAS.....But if you are really really scared,go in a car and stay there.....so, stay indoors, with lights off or go into a car and wait till it goes away;)
no! a car is a safe place to be.
if you are in a car or something else stay in your car or anything else . if you are at home get a flashlight or candle or anything that can help you see in the dark because sometimes electricity can power down sometimes and always have your phone just in case lightning strikes your house can sometimes get on fire . make sure you stay away from windows and don't go outside
Because the car is grounded, the lightning finds a path through the car to the ground, rather than through you. You do not want to be touching the ground and car at the same time lightning strikes the car, then the lightning will go through you to the ground.
Because the car will act as a Faraday cage (the electricity will flow round the outside).
The only way to prepare for lightning is to stay away from it. Run to the nearest closed building or get into a closed car with a metal roof when you hear or see signs of lightning. There are no safe places out of doors during a thunderstorm. Getting under a tree is not safe. Picnic shelters, car ports, , baseball dugouts, tents, etc. are not safe. Open cars, golf carts, convertibles, jeeps, etc are not safe. Consult the weather forecasts before going camping in remote areas.
Well when it hits all the charge will most likely disable the electrics of the car, it will travel down the car, the rubbers tyres will insulate you from electrocution.
It is advised to stay indoors during a thunderstorm. But, if you must go out, then realize that lightning doesn't usually strike in multiple places at once. The particles in the environment must recharge for a brief moment before creating another lightning strike; before you go out, wait for the next lightning strike, then as soon as you hear the thunder, run to your destination as quickly as possible, while also staying focused & alert, rather than panicking. If, for example, you are running a short distance from your house to your car, if you have to, wait in the car until you hear the next thunder, just like you did before you ran out of your house. But be advised, this could all change depending on the distance, as the danger increases the farther your distance! Stay safe.
If by the effect you mean to the person within the car, it might be because when lightning strikes the car, it acts as a gaussian sphere, wherein the charge resides only on the surface of the car. It might also be because that the car is not grounded and insulated because of rubber tyres.