Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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Does anyone have any suggestions on an electrician who installs lightning and surge protectors for your home? I know Sumter will install them for $350 or you can pay $25 and $6 a month. Thanks
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#2
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I got electricians est of $1200. SECO is better option as it costs less and they warranty their unit for 15 yrs. If it fails they replace it. Installation takes minutes and you don't have to be home as it is done outside the house.
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#3
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I had SECO install ours and they charged $5.95 a month. A friend told me that Lenhart installed his for $149
__________________
"I ain't as good as I once was, But I'm as good once as I ever was!" Toby Keith |
#4
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U can rent a whole house surge protector from SECO for $5.95 per mo. or buy it outright for a little over $300.00
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#5
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"the surge protector is put in @ the main panel in garage and does the same thing as SECO's" FYI: A-1 (Pat)'s telephone #352-205-0180 He did our home inspection for $199.00, and also was recommended by Warranty Department. Keep us updated and good luck! |
#6
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The surge protector in the meter will only prevent surges from passing through the meter box.
It does not protect your wiring inside the house. It does not protect your home from lightning strikes. I view the whole surge protector in the meter box as a scam. I signed up for the protector service anyway. I plan to look into lightning rods when I return since the developer has them on all of his buildings. Now I'll check the electric meters on the smaller buildings to see if they turn on the surge protectors. |
#7
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Thank you for the headsup information regarding the meter box, etc. I will keep this in mind for future reference, and certainly will discuss with A-1 before having anything installed, not sure why the Warranty Department would recommend someone that offers "SCAMS" though. Sure wouldn't want to be scammed. There always seems to be a method to everyone's madness. Can't get a straight answer or honest offer in this day and time. Makes for much skepticism. |
#8
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#9
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I do not sell lightning rods. I'm an electrical engineer and have, in the past, been involved in testing lightning protection devices for aircraft. Read the SECO answers for yourself. http://www.secoenergy.com/surge.html Ask the following questions. 1. Does your homeowners insurance offer you a discount? 2. Where does the surge come from? 3. The developer puts lightning rods on his small buildings. Why? 4. How does SECO test the MOV without destroying it? That was a problem that I always had. (We couldn't be sure we had the correct MOV installed) 5. Here is note 2 from the SECO paper. NOTE: Response time is not recognized as a viable SPD selection criteria by NEMA, IEEE/ANSI or the IEC. IEEE is Institute of Electronic and Electrical Engineers and ANSI is American National Standards Institute. 6. Read note 11 from the paper. If the surge protector worked how would the homeowner ever know the surge took place? 7. Read note 12. If you have a poor ground the thing will not work. It is a "less attractive path" path problem. SCAM wording If the surge comes from the electric company shouldn't they be responsible? The electric company wants you to buy a device that protects you from a surge coming from their power line. Sounds like a scam to me. I did have the protector turned on by the electric company when we bought our home. |
#10
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We ended up going with Lenhart Electric and are having them install a 72,000 Amp suppressor for $225 rather than the 18KA unit for $150. IEEE recommends a suppressor that will protect for strokes in the 40KA to 120KA range. With our area being in one of the highest lightning areas in the Country I would rather have the unit rated for the higher surge. The higher rated unit also comes with a damage protection guarantee from the manufacturer (Cutler Hammer) for damages to any of your equipment up to $50,000 due to surges.
Basically we need to protect from 3 potential problems, 1) Direct lightning hit. The surge protector won't help us for this, The only possible protection would involve a lightning rod installation surrounding your house with a grounding system that ensures everything is properly tied together. This is expensive and in my opinion, not necessary. The one in a million chance you take a direct hit doesn't justify the cost for these systems. However some people probably walk around with helmuts on just in case they may get hit with a stray meteor and wouldn't sleep unless they have 100% protection. 2) A surge from the Ulilities electric system that supplies your home. Many things can cause a surge including lightning strikes on the utilities facilities, improper grounding on the utility system and accidental high voltage energizing of our lower supply voltage. Utilities do a lot to avoid this problem but problems still occur from time to time. Utilities will generally cover any damages caused by their errors or faulty equipment on their system that cause an overvoltage but most won't cover an overvoltage traveling through their system due to a lightning strike on their lines. 3) A surge from a lightning strike next to your home that discharges through a grounded point that is tied to the ground in your home. The strike will raise the ground voltage temporarily causing high voltage on your internal wiring and possibly damaging any equipment you may have connected at the time. The strike could hit a TV dish, a fence post or anything else that may allow it to tie in with your grounding system. Generally a surge protector at the electric service point (meter or breaker box) should give you pretty good protection if your grounding system is all properly connected. The only other extra protection you should consider is simple surge protection plugs or strips for your TV's, computers and stereos. If you put in a properly rated surge protector (72KA in my opinion and use the plug in surge protectors at some of your outlets where you have sensitive electrical equipment I would't lose any sleep. |
#11
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Protectors are simple science. As posted, surges that can overwhelm protection inside appliances are typically 20,000 amps. So a minimal 'whole house' protector starts at about 50,000 amps. These numbers say nothing about protection. Only that the protector will remain functional after every lightning strike. Simple science only defines the system's life expectancy after many surges. Earthing is the art. How much protection do you have? Well, how much did you upgrade the earth ground? Only item that determines how much protection exists during each surge is the quality of and connection to that earthing. Earthing is the art. Only earthing does the protection. Only earthing says how well hundreds of thousands of joules dissipate harmlessly outside. A protector - any protector - or a wire - connects that energy harmlessly to earth ground. A protector is only a connecting device to the only thing that does all protection. That absorbs energy harmlessly. Either energy is harmlessly absorbed by single point earth ground. Or that energy is inside destructively searching for earth via appliances. Do not spend so much time on the protector. Worry more about what is actually doing all protection: earthing. Your solution is the only one used anywhere that damage cannot happen. But don't let a 'box' attract your attention. Pay far more attention to what everyone ignores because they do not see it. Protection is defined by what most everyone ignores. Protection during each surge is only defined by the quality of an earthing system. A protector is sized so that all surges - any direct lightning strike - do not damage the protector. Either a protector or a wire can connect a surge to earth. Neither that protector nor wire should be damaged - so you have a 75,000 amp protector. That does not say anything about the quality of your protection. The art - earthing - defines the protection. BTW, same applies to lightning rods. Rods also do not do protection. That rod is only as effective as earthing electrodes it connects to. Those rods are simple science. The art is in earthing electrodes. It sounds like your electrician knows all this. |
#12
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Be warry of the term "whole house surge protection". You may be protected from INDIRECT lightning with the SECO surge protection device on the electric meter but there is always the chance that some voltage will get through that will be enough to fry your electronics. You need secondary point-of-use protection on anythig you value like computers, TVs, microwave, refrig, tele ans machine, garage door operators, etc. Be sure that the cable for TVs and telephone lines for computers also goes though a surge protection device. Remember Lightning Loves Technology! If your concer is a less frequent but more sever DIRECT strike to your home consider a lightning protection system, commonly called lighting rods, from a qualified installer.
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#13
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#14
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#15
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An AC mains surge approaches that SECO protector. Now a surge makes a decision. Does it go less than ten feet to earth via ground rods? Or does it go much farther inside, blow through protection already inside appliances, and then obtain earth via those appliances? Instead, a surge goes harmlessly to earth by an easier path. Via the SECO protector IF "the quality of and connection to that earthing" is superior. It sound like paullynnchetti's electrician understands this. An 18,000 amp protector is grossly undersized. 'Whole house' protectors start at 50,000 amps so that direct lightning strikes go to earth outside the building. Their electrician installed a 72,000 amp protector. And probably upgraded earthing. Because earthing (not any protector) defines protection. You are assuming protectors stop a surge. A myth used to promote 'point of use' protectors. Protectors never stop surges. Never. Either a surge is connected to better earthing. Or a 'point of use' protector can even connect a surge to earth destructively via nearby appliances. Protection is always about the path to earth. Once that surge is inside, then nothing will stop a destructive hunt for earth ground. |
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