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Re: [TowerTalk] whole house surge protectors

To: Jim Lux <jimlux@earthlink.net>
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] whole house surge protectors
From: Jim Lux <jimlux@earthlink.net>
Date: Tue, 15 Apr 2008 16:39:45 -0700
List-post: <towertalk@contesting.com">mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
Hey all.. forgive the "blast from the past".. for some reason a bunch of 
emails showed up as new, but in reality, were from a long time ago..

Jim, W6RMK


Jim Lux wrote:
> Tom Anderson wrote:
>> Jim and fellow tower talk members:
>>
>> I'm in the process of having a 220 line run into the shack for a new 
>> Alpha 9500 amp my XYL and I picked up at the plant in Boulder a month 
>> ago.  Still waiting on the electrician showing up though.
>>
>> While I had him on the phone I asked him (and yes I've known him for 
>> years (I was his son's Eagle Scout advisor) and he's done work for me 
>> before and does a lot of commercial work near us) about a whole house 
>> protector and in his opinion he felt a good individual unit for the 
>> plugs and equipment you wanted to protect was better than a whole 
>> house protector. He said many strikes, surges, etc. come into the 
>> house via phone lines, TV cable, satellite dishes, etc. and often 
>> bypass the whole house protector before getting into the home 
>> electrical system, which is why he prefers good single unit protectors 
>> when needed.
> 
> Not to be argumentative, but it would seem that the peer-reviewed 
> transient protection literature doesn't agree with the single unit 
> protection philosophy.
> (i.e. things that aren't  sales material or field application guidelines 
> from one company or another.. but stuff that has been independently 
> produced, or at least reviewed by folks without a financial or other 
> interest.  Sure, the guys from Erico publish papers on transient 
> suppression, and Erico sells products that do this, but the journal's 
> pre-publication review process generally makes sure that 2 or 3 other 
> folks take a look at it and make sure it's not all bushwa.)
> 
> 
> Your friend is right that lots of transients come in other ways, which 
> is why you need protection on *all* of them, and why everyone is so 
> obsessed with all those "bonding" rules.  However, there's a whole raft 
> of reasons why protection at the entrance is needed, and preferred, and 
> which should be properly coordinated with the downstream protection.
> 
> The guidelines for things like safety critical installations (e.g. the 
> FAA guidelines and DoD guidelines) all talk about transient protection 
> at the service entrance, but make little or no mention of "point of use" 
> protection.
> 
> Also, a lot of protection devices get a lot of their protection ability 
> by absorbing the transient (and getting spectacularly destroyed in the 
> process).  I think I'd rather have the spectacular failure out by the 
> meter, rather than on some plugstrip behind the desk.
> 
> 
> Really, the only hazard that point of use protection protects against is 
> a transient being induced in your house wiring closer to the equipment 
> than to the service entrance, because of the time delays involved. 
> (transients from outside, which are MUCH more common, get suppressed at 
> the service entrance) Or, if you have something in your house that puts 
> big transients on the power wiring (like that 1kW tesla coil you fire up 
> in the garage.. been there, done that, cooked my garage door opener and 
> a UPS.)
> 
> 
>  Of course, a decent series mode suppressor (i.e. a LC low pass filter) 
> will solve that problem.  Most modern electronic equipment already has 
> fairly decent low pass input filters on the AC line connection (to 
> prevent signals inside the box from coming out and creating EMI havoc), 
> so the sub microsecond transient resulting from that spurious induced 
> voltage, and reflecting back from the clamp will get smoothed out by the 
> filter to a level that is lower than the damage threshold for your device.
> 
> 
> 
> For folks wanting to spend some time and about $20, get the book by 
> Standler on overvoltage protection. (google standler overvoltage and 
> you'll probably find it) He's got all the data, the impulse waveforms, 
> the theory of what works and what doesn't.  His website also has some 
> info.  I can't recall which off hand, but in one place or the other, he 
> talks about the UL1449 standards, and the problem with "joule ratings" 
> and "clipping voltage".
> 

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