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Jun-17-2014 01:00 PM
Jun-17-2014 12:39 PM
2Shays3712 wrote:
Have had both Progressive and SurgeGuard. A couple years ago, RV park got hit by lightning about 150ft from our trailer and tripped our 30A SurgeGuard plugged into the pole. Ruined 3-4 campers weekend near us and the park model next to us. Heard later several microwaves and one fridge had to be replaced. Anything is better than being plugged direct to the pole. Would spend the money for the Progressive because of low and high voltage monitoring. Ours has tripped for both reasons recently. We now unplug from the pole when we are going to be gone during inclement weather as a precaution . Lots of lightning storms that come up quickly in the summer in the mountains!
I also place jacks and landing gear on 4" X 6" wooden blocks with plastic pads on top of the blocks as a precaution. Not sure it will protect us from a direct hit, but just another precaution. Have had the hair raised on my head as a kid when a lightning strike was near while on a tractor. Not afraid, but have a healthy respect for lightning!
Jun-17-2014 12:32 PM
Jun-17-2014 10:35 AM
Jun-17-2014 09:41 AM
Jun-17-2014 07:25 AM
korbe wrote:
We, as weekend campers within mainly public campgrounds and parks, don't feel the need.
Neither did I until I plugged into a brand new Power pedestal at a campground I've stayed at on mothers day weekend for the past 3 years.
I also look around in my rig and see what I am protecting.
Jun-17-2014 06:44 AM
Bumpyroad wrote:There was a lightening hit in the campground in Dickinson, TX a couple of years ago. I did not have the PI EMS at the time but only the PI surge protector. It pretty well got smoked but the RV suffered no loss. When I went to a 50AMP trailer I bought the PI EMS portable unit and it has cut off power a few times for either low or high voltage. Cheap insurance IMO but if you feel lucky...
well first of all it will probably be more than $200. and I wouldn't be without one, but make it a multi function one that protects against over/under voltage, mis wiring, delayed AC restart, etc. don't cheap out because "I've camped for 150 years and never needed one". you only need it once. remember one night in Austin a bolt of lightning hit the campground and after the smoke cleared I was about the only RV in the park that had any lights on. all those others probably hadn't had a problem for years either. :s
bumpy
Jun-17-2014 05:06 AM