Power Conditioner/ Surge Protection

grizzlyman

grizzlyman

Audioholic Intern
They're always new guys on here looking for advice in the home theater area and you guys tell them about everything but what might be the most important. You need to protect your investment it's like buy a brand new car and have no insurance on it. I just been reading around and never seen anything about them so I thought I put this out there. You should at least get a surge protector if not a power conditioner which is said to improve sound and visual quality. I have a American Power Conversion H15 and love the thing.
 
M

MDS

Audioholic Spartan
There are dozens of threads about surge protection and power conditioners from the last month alone.

I have an APC H10 and it seems to do its job just fine.
 
stratman

stratman

Audioholic Ninja
Living in Florida (lightning and shark attack capitol of the US) the best thing to do is just pull the plug from the wall when lightning storms threaten. I've seen "protected" systems fried to a crisp after an owner put his trust on a surge protector. I'm not saying not to use it, but in certain circumstances (power company screw up) they help.
 
Halon451

Halon451

Audioholic Samurai
Yep, most of the surge suppresion devices on the market even state they do not protect against direct lightning strikes, and it is important to note the joule rating to see why. The average lightning strike is between one and ten billion joules, whereas the average power strip surge protector only works in a range between an average of 1000 to 5000 joules (on some of the better models). That said, a direct lightning strike is a HT system's worst enemy (maybe besides a spilled sippy cup).

If you don't know a joule is simply a measurement of energy, usually expressed in terms of newton-meters or in this case, Coulomb-volts (amount of energy needed to move one coulomb of charge within one volt potential difference). The coulomb is a figure used to express a number of free electrons (the basic components of electrical current), expressed as 6.02 x 10e23, or 6.022 with 23 zeroes behind it - passing through a given point in one second of time (i.e., coulombs per second), gives us both magnitude and directional flow, commonly defined as electrical current. One coulomb passing by a given point in one second equals one Ampere, by the way. ;)

Nevertheless, you would be unwise to not have at least a common surge suppressor hooked up to your system, as this will certainly help protect against the normal spikes and surges that come through the grid and into your home. This is what they are designed to do.

I'd say the jury is probably still out (and will likely stay out) on whether or not the power conditioner devices truly have a remarkable impact on audio/video quality, as some say yes, others say hell no, and ad infinitum. ;)
 
Halon451

Halon451

Audioholic Samurai
Living in Florida (lightning and shark attack capitol of the US) the best thing to do is just pull the plug from the wall when lightning storms threaten. I've seen "protected" systems fried to a crisp after an owner put his trust on a surge protector. I'm not saying not to use it, but in certain circumstances (power company screw up) they help.
Is there any devices out there that help protect our beloved HT systems from shark attacks?? :eek:
 
itschris

itschris

Moderator
It seems that many of the "power conditioners" like the monster, panamax, and furman have surge protection built in as well. I can't imagine that for $200 on some of the entry level units that they can do both really well.

I've read quite a bit about this stuff on other forums where engineers and electrictians lose there minds during these debates, but a common theme seems to be that the better Tripp Lite strips usually <$100 are the some of the best for the money.
 
F

fmw

Audioholic Ninja
Is there any devices out there that help protect our beloved HT systems from shark attacks?? :eek:
If you went swimming with your beloved HT equipment it isn't likely it would last long enough to encounter a shark. That isn't fool proof protection but probably adequate in most cases.
 
stratman

stratman

Audioholic Ninja
Well for $5000 I can make you an aluminum HT cage that's guaranteed to keep the sharks away from your HT!:p
 
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