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Don,
I also have Tripplite power strips in the shack, which I got many years ago when I was impressed with their warranty for connected equipment. I use a couple of them chained to provide enough outlets, and then unprotected units chained off of that to provide even more outlets. Some of the unprotected outlets are fed through a new circuit from the new panel that I put in along with a 220 V line for the PA. As I was looking to buy even more Tripplites to have everything protected, I called Tripplite for advice, and also grilled them on the warranty terms. That is when I first learnt that the warranty is void if there is any chaining of strips, and also if another circuit is involved with the same equipment, tied together even by a ground strap or an audio cable, etc. A little later I came across the advice on this reflector (probably by Jim) that whole house protection is superior and power strips with MOV's may even be harmful. I don't have any UPS's. The newer Tripplite protectors had network and phone line protection built in. Now I don't want to waste money buying any more of those expensive protectors. I figure the first priority is to get a whole house protector. I believe I should put all the ham gear and computers on the new circuit. I will need two levels of outlet strips. Maybe the first level could be one of the old Tripplite's which would provide equal MOV protecton to everything, but I need to think more about whether that is right. Anyway, it seems desirable to add independent protection for network connection and maybe phone line. I need to find suitable units at reasonable price. Having a UPS for computers seems very desirable, but if it has built-in MOV on the input side it should maybe be removed based on what others have said. 73, Erik K7TV Don Wilhelm wrote: I cannot comment on your particular 'high-leg' entry system - mine is plain vanilla 240 volt single phase with neutral. I can only speak from my experience. I have an entry panel surge protection device in my power entrance panel. I also use local surge protectors (Tripplite) at the ham station, and the computers have UPSs that offer surge protection. All the hamshack runs off the same AC receptacle. We had a close lightning event last summer and there were no incidences of damage on the AC side, although all the GFCI breakers tripped. The wired Ethernet devices were not so fortunate, I lost a router, 2 8 port switches, an access point, a NAS storage device, and 4 computers after that event, that did not mention the Ethernet connected network printer that lost its Ethernet capability, but still worked with a USB connection - all apparently due to the surge coming in over the Ethernet cables. Fortunately, no data was lost, the devices did not work due to damaged network ports. So the AC protection did work, but the unprotected Ethernet devices did not survive. The 'whole house' protection did work. ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
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