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-   The Villages, Florida, General Discussion (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-general-discussion-73/)
-   -   SECO's "Surge MitiGator" worthwhile? (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-general-discussion-73/secos-surge-mitigator-worthwhile-342833/)

MrLonzo 07-21-2023 01:41 PM

SECO's "Surge MitiGator" worthwhile?
 
My understanding is that SECO's "Surge MitiGator" protects your home's large appliances, but you still need individual surge protection for smaller electronics. I do understand the damage an electrical surge can cause to a personal computer, for example. But in general, I don't understand surge protection. For example, why is surge protection important for appliances that are not being used and are not WiFi enabled (washer, dryer, dishwasher, coffee maker...)? I don't think I'd be running any of these appliances during a thunderstorm. What about refrigerator? What appliances DO need surge protection? Is the Surge MitiGator worth the investment? Thank you!

dewilson58 07-21-2023 01:49 PM

Like lightening protection................"the world may never know".

We had one installed during construction, so the cost was so minor compared to the rest of the house...............we jus said, sure.

retiredguy123 07-21-2023 02:02 PM

In my opinion, it is a waste of money.

Read the warranty. Even if it is a large appliance, if it has a microchip, it is probably not covered. Almost every appliance has a microchip. Also, it does not even cover electrical wiring and outlets. SECO's whole house surge protector is just a way for SECO to increase their profits. They don't provide any data to prove that it will prevent any damage, and their warranty has so many exclusions that it is practically worthless. Also, if surge protectors were really needed, power companies would incorporate into their multi-million dollar power distribution system as part of the design instead of asking customers to pay extra for them.

Bogie Shooter 07-21-2023 02:06 PM

Heavily discussed on this thread.
https://www.talkofthevillages.com/fo...ght=Lightening

Babubhat 07-21-2023 02:07 PM

You have homeowners insurance for this. Put protection on outlets

Altavia 07-21-2023 02:51 PM

It's a risk reduction.

After dealing with insurance for months after a lightening strike up north, I have one.

Stu from NYC 07-21-2023 03:19 PM

We have one thru Seco and electronics and expensive appliances have their own.

Others have suggested putting another one on inside your electrical panel, good friend who is an electrical engineer says the Seco one is enough.

In other words who knows just think of it as insurance and would rather not give our insurance company a reason to either raise rates even more or cancel policy.

Ellwoodrick 07-22-2023 05:12 AM

Here is an independent article on the subject.



Does Your Home Need a Whole-house Surge Protector? | HowStuffWorks

banjobob 07-22-2023 05:28 AM

The small fee is a good investment with lightning we have in this area, yes I have surge protectors on electronics also.

mikeycereal 07-22-2023 05:52 AM

I have a few surge protecters for my computer and TV. I know they are not 100% but I use them rather than not.

My favorite time to see/hear a lightning storm is when I'm not at home.

Berwin 07-22-2023 06:04 AM

I recall back in the 90s when whole house surge protectors were coming out hearing that they actually paid for themselves over some period of time. Not by protecting anything (although they did that) but by reducing your electric bill slightly every month. The power coming in from the street fluctuates slightly and by limiting the over voltages you are not paying for that which your appliances happily consume even though they don't need it. We're talking small change here but over time it adds up.

birdawg 07-22-2023 06:15 AM

I think it cost 5-6 dollars.

retiredguy123 07-22-2023 06:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Berwin (Post 2237662)
I recall back in the 90s when whole house surge protectors were coming out hearing that they actually paid for themselves over some period of time. Not by protecting anything (although they did that) but by reducing your electric bill slightly every month. The power coming in from the street fluctuates slightly and by limiting the over voltages you are not paying for that which your appliances happily consume even though they don't need it. We're talking small change here but over time it adds up.

I would like to see the actual data to support that claim. Otherwise, I am very skeptical.

airstreamingypsy 07-22-2023 07:33 AM

I rent the whole house surge guard from SECO, and my electronics are also plugged into APC UPSes. I lost a brand new TV a month after I moved here, to lightning, no problems since I got the APCs.

Elixir34 07-22-2023 08:33 AM

Surge can come from other sources besides your SECO power feed
 
For example, why is surge protection important for appliances that are not being used and are not WiFi enabled (washer, dryer, dishwasher, coffee maker...)? I don't think I'd be running any of these appliances during a thunderstorm. What about refrigerator? What appliances DO need surge protection? Is the Surge MitiGator worth the investment? Thank you![/QUOTE]

Appliances don’t need to be operating to be affected by surge. And surges can enter your home’s AC distribution from other than the SECO power meter. A lightning strike took out our electric stove without activating the SECO meter surge protector. (Both surge protector LEDs were still lit.) It likely entered the house through the irrigation system, because it fried the irrigation controller, the irr. controller individual AC outlet surge protector, and the GFCI outlet into which it was plugged.


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