โFeb-13-2014 08:03 AM
โFeb-22-2014 07:42 PM
TechWriter wrote:
I have a hard-wired 50A 40240 and the only protection missing from the comparable PI unit is 220V.
โFeb-16-2014 01:44 PM
TechWriter wrote:myredracer wrote:
An EMS or whatever you want to call it, as said many times, is a great idea and cheap insurance.
You can either get a quality US made Progressive Industries one with a lifetime warranty or one of the off-shore models with a 1 year warranty. Based on warranty alone - easy decision....
So if a unit is not made in the states -- let's say Canada, for example -- that would be a reason not to buy, right?
Besides the dictionary defining offshore as "situated at sea some distance from the shore", is Surge\Guard made in Canada?
Read the warranties carefully.myredracer wrote:
One thing I like about the PI EMS is that it shuts you down at 104 volts while the other popular one shuts down at 102 volts. 102V IMO is too low. I read in one AC manufacturer's manual recently that anything lower than 105V can cause damage and I've found that 105 is a commonly mentioned threshold where you should manually shut down if you don't have automatic protection.
You appear to say that 105V is as low as you should go. I agree. That's why I bought an auto former.
But neither PI or TRC units meet that 105V criteria. No, but PI is closer by 2 volts. Of course an autoformer will address low supply voltage conditions below 105 volts, but the original question was to do with surge protection only.myredracer wrote:
Progressive Industries have a number of additional features as this chart shows: Progressive Industries versus SurgeGuard This makes it even easier to decide. ๐
Depends on the unit. I have a hard-wired 50A 40240 and the only protection missing from the comparable PI unit is 220V.
Actually, there's at least 5 categories that the SurgeGuard 40240 doesn't match, one of which is that the EMS can be bypassed in case the computer fails, but Surgeguard can't. Also, if you have a surge that shuts down either unit, the EMS can be sent back for repair but the SurgeGuard is a throw-away. It's not possible to do a detailed apples to apples comparison because neither manufacturer has complete specs on everything, but there are enough benefits to PI that would make me buy one.
โFeb-16-2014 11:26 AM
myredracer wrote:
An EMS or whatever you want to call it, as said many times, is a great idea and cheap insurance.
You can either get a quality US made Progressive Industries one with a lifetime warranty or one of the off-shore models with a 1 year warranty. Based on warranty alone - easy decision....
myredracer wrote:
One thing I like about the PI EMS is that it shuts you down at 104 volts while the other popular one shuts down at 102 volts. 102V IMO is too low. I read in one AC manufacturer's manual recently that anything lower than 105V can cause damage and I've found that 105 is a commonly mentioned threshold where you should manually shut down if you don't have automatic protection.
myredracer wrote:
Progressive Industries have a number of additional features as this chart shows: Progressive Industries versus SurgeGuard This makes it even easier to decide. ๐
โFeb-16-2014 09:55 AM
โFeb-16-2014 07:48 AM
โFeb-16-2014 07:41 AM
1775 wrote:
An RV surge/power protection unit such as Surge Guard or Progressive Industries will. The circuit inside the unit will blow with a lightening strike surge or transients. The unit is then unusable and needs to be replaced or with the Progressive sent back to the factory to have the surge circuit replaced for a price.
โFeb-16-2014 07:24 AM
โFeb-16-2014 07:22 AM
Surge protectors won't save your electronics (TV, VCR, PC) if lightning strikes your power line. Surge protectors provide protection for power surges in the line from the power company, but not for lightning. To really guard against strike damage, you need a lightning arrester. The arrester uses a gas-filled gap that acts as an open circuit to low potentials, but becomes ionized and conducts at very high potentials. If the lightning hits the line you are protecting, the gas gap will conduct the current safely to ground.
โFeb-16-2014 06:36 AM
1775 wrote:TechWriter wrote:ventrman wrote:
I had a Storm that took out my TV at my House as well as my Computer, The TV was not Surge Protected, but the Computer was. Unfortunately, I had not protected the Telephone Line connected to my Computer. I do recommend them.
Generally, RV surge protectors are not going to protect you from lightning strikes or transients.
An RV surge/power protection unit such as Surge Guard or Progressive Industries will. The circuit inside the unit will blow with a lightening strike surge or transients. The unit is then unusable and needs to be replaced or with the Progressive sent back to the factory to have the surge circuit replaced for a price.
โFeb-16-2014 06:08 AM
โFeb-15-2014 08:38 PM
TechWriter wrote:ventrman wrote:
I had a Storm that took out my TV at my House as well as my Computer, The TV was not Surge Protected, but the Computer was. Unfortunately, I had not protected the Telephone Line connected to my Computer. I do recommend them.
Generally, RV surge protectors are not going to protect you from lightning strikes or transients.
โFeb-15-2014 01:12 PM
โFeb-15-2014 09:09 AM
ventrman wrote:
I had a Storm that took out my TV at my House as well as my Computer, The TV was not Surge Protected, but the Computer was. Unfortunately, I had not protected the Telephone Line connected to my Computer. I do recommend them.
โFeb-15-2014 06:58 AM