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So we went with Seco, as he suggested. There has been 3 lightning strikes on homes. Damage to the roof and appliances, electronics, irrigation controllers, and pool controls |
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The lightening can also induce surges into the house via nearby ground strike or into the house wiring from the electro-magnetic field. This is why local protection is also recommended for key devices. |
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Ahhh... it does not come from the "fuse box". It comes from the circuit breaker panel. Where the surge protection would also be located (in or right before). |
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The Type-2 surge protector installed by an electrician at the circuit breaker box also blocks surges coming from the utility line but also reduces and or blocks power surges coming from all the branch circuits which occurs about 80% of the time. This surge protector is designed to protect sensitive electronic equipment while the Seco protector clearly states in its warranty that it does not guarantee protection for any device with an electronic chip. As far as stopping the surge Before it comes into your house, The Type-2 protector such as the Eaton Ultra is designed to be connected to the closest breaker slot to the main feed in the circuit breaker panel just for this reason. You want the protector as close to the power source coming from the utility as possible because many power surges are very fast and the length of the wires and the location to the main breaker can make a difference. Hope this clears things up. |
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