Just for kicks and giggles I decided to open up my Surge Guard as I'll never use it as I don't trust it. Now after a couple of years of using there was always something rattling around in there and I was curious as to what is was.
![](https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/9402583/surgeguard/IMG_4555.JPG)
This thing was not easy to get open at they use special screws to keep it closed. I ended up cutting around the screws.
The guts.
![](https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/9402583/surgeguard/IMG_4550.JPG)
Mystery solved at what was rattling around inside.
![](https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/9402583/surgeguard/IMG_4551.JPG)
Seems all the mounts for the main power connector all broke loose. The main unit is top heavy and weighs 2 lbs, secured to plastic with 4 tiny screws. There was some corrosion on the washers, which tells me this thing was not very weather sealed. Which is not surprising as the silicone did not go all the way around the connection point. It only covered about 50%
Seems all the protective sacrificial diodes were intact.
![](https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/9402583/surgeguard/IMG_4552.JPG)
Which makes me concerned that the power surge that nearly burnt down our camper was not stopped by the surge guard, considering how expensive this thing is it should have stopped the surge.
You be the judge if you want to protect your investment by this product with it's one year warranty and their non responsive customer service. The quality control is really suspect.
![](https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/9402583/surgeguard/IMG_4553.JPG)
Campground power is one of the worst and dangerous things we've encountered in our travels. Pedestals wired wrong. Open neutrals, burnt pedestals , high voltage, low voltage and one pedestal wired without breakers. The surge guard is not something I'd ever trust.