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#1
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![]() Susan H. Simko wrote: johnrutz wrote: Lightnin seems to hit whereever so I dont think anything you did or dint do would have mattered, your just lucky it didnt blow all the electronics in your house too ( i got hit and the surge came in phone lines and elec lines and fried every apliance I had ) My pond is on a GFSC (sic?) protected circuit. The only other thing on that circuit are the other outdoor outlets. Most people don't seem to be aware these days that surges can come through phone lines and cable lines. I've known a few people who have had their computers fried via a lightening strike carried into the computer by the modem via a plugged in phone line. A lot of surge suppressors these days have connectors for coax and / or telephone lines. In our house phones, all cable connections, and electronics are on good surge suppressors. A UPC protects the office computer equipment and the laptop has a portable surge protector that stays permanently plugged into the charger. My general rule of thumb is that if a surge suppressor offers an equipment damage guarantee, it's decent. Problem with real cheap ones is that they may not react quickly enough to stop damage. Guess I'm showing the conputer/electronics geek in me again. Mea culpa. Susan shsimko at duke dot edu -- all my electronics -- entertainment center,phones and computer are on either tripple or quadrupls surge protectors due to the COOP's clunky switching or our summer thunder storms, a couple months ago my power pole got a direct hit, blew the transformer all over the yard every thing in the house survived, John Rutz Z5 New Mexico never miss a good oportunity to shut up see my pond at: http://www.fuerjefe.com |
#2
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John:
This question may be outdated by new regulations and modern technology but, was there any discharge of PCB's due to the explosion of the transformer? BK "johnrutz" wrote in message ... Susan H. Simko wrote: johnrutz wrote: Lightnin seems to hit whereever so I dont think anything you did or dint do would have mattered, your just lucky it didnt blow all the electronics in your house too ( i got hit and the surge came in phone lines and elec lines and fried every apliance I had ) My pond is on a GFSC (sic?) protected circuit. The only other thing on that circuit are the other outdoor outlets. Most people don't seem to be aware these days that surges can come through phone lines and cable lines. I've known a few people who have had their computers fried via a lightening strike carried into the computer by the modem via a plugged in phone line. A lot of surge suppressors these days have connectors for coax and / or telephone lines. In our house phones, all cable connections, and electronics are on good surge suppressors. A UPC protects the office computer equipment and the laptop has a portable surge protector that stays permanently plugged into the charger. My general rule of thumb is that if a surge suppressor offers an equipment damage guarantee, it's decent. Problem with real cheap ones is that they may not react quickly enough to stop damage. Guess I'm showing the conputer/electronics geek in me again. Mea culpa. Susan shsimko at duke dot edu -- all my electronics -- entertainment center,phones and computer are on either tripple or quadrupls surge protectors due to the COOP's clunky switching or our summer thunder storms, a couple months ago my power pole got a direct hit, blew the transformer all over the yard every thing in the house survived, John Rutz Z5 New Mexico never miss a good oportunity to shut up see my pond at: http://www.fuerjefe.com |
#3
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![]() bobkiely (Remove NOSPAM) wrote: John: This question may be outdated by new regulations and modern technology but, was there any discharge of PCB's due to the explosion of the transformer? BK no even tho we are rural as heck here they did get rid of all ther old pcb transformers and mine was installed in 99 John Rutz Z5 New Mexico never miss a good oportunity to shut up see my pond at: http://www.fuerjefe.com |
#4
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![]() bobkiely (Remove NOSPAM) wrote: John: This question may be outdated by new regulations and modern technology but, was there any discharge of PCB's due to the explosion of the transformer? BK no even tho we are rural as heck here they did get rid of all ther old pcb transformers and mine was installed in 99 John Rutz Z5 New Mexico never miss a good oportunity to shut up see my pond at: http://www.fuerjefe.com |
#5
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John:
This question may be outdated by new regulations and modern technology but, was there any discharge of PCB's due to the explosion of the transformer? BK "johnrutz" wrote in message ... Susan H. Simko wrote: johnrutz wrote: Lightnin seems to hit whereever so I dont think anything you did or dint do would have mattered, your just lucky it didnt blow all the electronics in your house too ( i got hit and the surge came in phone lines and elec lines and fried every apliance I had ) My pond is on a GFSC (sic?) protected circuit. The only other thing on that circuit are the other outdoor outlets. Most people don't seem to be aware these days that surges can come through phone lines and cable lines. I've known a few people who have had their computers fried via a lightening strike carried into the computer by the modem via a plugged in phone line. A lot of surge suppressors these days have connectors for coax and / or telephone lines. In our house phones, all cable connections, and electronics are on good surge suppressors. A UPC protects the office computer equipment and the laptop has a portable surge protector that stays permanently plugged into the charger. My general rule of thumb is that if a surge suppressor offers an equipment damage guarantee, it's decent. Problem with real cheap ones is that they may not react quickly enough to stop damage. Guess I'm showing the conputer/electronics geek in me again. Mea culpa. Susan shsimko at duke dot edu -- all my electronics -- entertainment center,phones and computer are on either tripple or quadrupls surge protectors due to the COOP's clunky switching or our summer thunder storms, a couple months ago my power pole got a direct hit, blew the transformer all over the yard every thing in the house survived, John Rutz Z5 New Mexico never miss a good oportunity to shut up see my pond at: http://www.fuerjefe.com |
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