[geeks] Lightning question
Bill Bradford
mrbill at mrbill.net
Mon Jul 24 13:53:58 CDT 2006
On Mon, Jul 24, 2006 at 08:35:06PM +0300, Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
> There are two surge supressors for power lines that actually work.
> The cheap one is made by Trip-Lite and sold under the brand ISOBAR.
> The other is from a company called TransTector. They make the "right stuff".
> http://www.transtector.com/
> The ones that are IMHO less than worthless use a MOV (Metal Oxide Varistor).
> There are versions of the MOV devices that are sold for power lines,
> telephone lines and networks. All are less than worthless because you
> think they are protecting you and they are not.
> Think condoms with pinholes. Condoms with pinholes that explode when they leak.
> TransTector uses silicon diodes, I think ISOBARs use gas discharge tubes,
> but I'm not sure. A combination of both is IMHO best.
I've been looking at these - any opinions?
http://www.brickwall.com/
Surge Protectors That WILL NOT Fail!
* No Sacrificial or Wear Components,
No MOV's, NO SURGE PROTECTOR FAILURES
* No Surge Diversion To Ground
* Exceptional Powerline Filtering
* Fastest Surge Protector Response Time
* Lowest Surge Protector Clamping Level
* Lowest Surge Protector Let-Through Voltage
Expensive, though.
Bill
--
Bill Bradford
Houston, Texas
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