Kurt,
Great article! I would be interested to hear your opinion on power conditioners and re-generators considering the perspectives in your article.
Are they something you consider un-necessary with money better spent on quality sources/amps with better designed power supplies? Are there any significant benefits to paying for that perfect 110 input sine wave?
Thanks,
-Brian
It depends where you live.
However the weather is becoming more violent, with larger longer electrical storms. The power lines go over vast distances, with a lot of catchment area for lightening strikes.
The other issue as home equipment becomes more and more dependent on increasingly complex and therefore frailer micro processing chips. The damage risk rises year by year.
I think an awful lot of the serious failures reported on these forums are weather related.
I consistently recommend whole house surge suppression. This protects not only your AV equipment, but refrigerators, furnace controls etc. These devices are also becoming more complex. It seems they can no longer build a home appliance without a bunch of digital processing.
Next, I really do believe that a smart UPS is required in vast stretches of the USA, to power any equipment using complex digital processors.
These are devices that switch to battery in one to 5 msec when power deviates by more than set parameters. I have mine set to respond at 96 Volts low and 132 volts high.
In the winter there is not a lot of activity from the UPS units. Mostly it occurs with Minkota power switching the ripple heat on and off.
In the summer however, there is a lot of frequent activity, with the UPS units removing the gear from the grid.
So I think these units are well worth the investment probably in most of the USA, certainly the entire Midwest and I suspect a lot of other areas also.
I have the ultimate weapon. If there is a lot of electrical storm activity with lights flickering and UPS units cutting in and out, then I start the generator and go off grid until the storms pass.
When I was building chairman and capital budget chairman of our large medical center, I pursued a vigorous UPS installation program. I cut the failure and downtime of vital complex medical equipment drastically. This resulted in monetary savings and reduced hazard to patients by reducing the chance that vital equipment would not be available.
So yes, I'm a huge proponent of UPS devices, especially those from APC.
Regenerative devices I do not advise. Apart from being overkill, that add an element if unreliability, generate a lot of heat and waste power.