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![]() On Nov 23, 9:56 am, "w_tom" wrote: There is no stopping or blocking of lightning as plug-in protector manufacturers hope you believe. The best information I have seen on surges and surge protection is at http://www.mikeholt.com/files/PDF/Li...ion_May051.pdf - the title is "How to protect your house and its contents from lightning: IEEE guide for surge protection of equipment connected to AC power and communication circuits" published by the IEEE in 2005 (the IEEE is the dominant organization of electrical and electronic engineers in the US). A second guide is http://www.nist.gov/public_affairs/p.../surgesfnl.pdf - this is the "NIST recommended practice guide: Surges Happen!: how to protect the appliances in your home" published by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (the US government agency formerly called the National Bureau of Standards) in 2001 Both guides were intended for wide distribution to the general public to explain surges and how to protect against them. The IEEE guide was targeted at people who have some (not much) technical background. Both say plug-in surge suppressors are effective. All interconnected devices, like a computer and printer, need to connect to the same surge protector. If a device, like a computer, has external connections like phone or LAN, all those wires have to run through the surge suppressor for protection. This type of suppressor is called a surge reference equalizer (SRE) by the IEEE (also described by the NIST). The voltage on all wires connected to the SRE (power, phone, CATV, LAN, ...) are clamped to a common ground at the SRE and the voltages are held to a value that is safe to the connected device. Ratings vary from junk to very high. While a single point ground with phone, CATV, ... protectors connecting with short wires to the grounding electrode wire at the power service is best for eliminating the ground potential differences in Doug's post, SREs also provide protection. That protector also does not stop or absorb anything. A protector is only as effective as its earth ground. Effective protectors make a short and temporary connection to earth. As is clearly described in the IEEE guide, plug-in suppressors work by clamping,.They do not work primarily by earthing, or stopping, blocking, absorbing. Many believe a plug-in protector will somehow stop or absorb what 3 miles of sky could not. Among those who believe that are the IEEE and NIST. -- bud-- |
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