whole house surge protector?


I have dedicated lines (nice improvment). We are now in a situation of having to upgrade our circuit box (heavy up).

The electrician is recommending a whole house surge protector which many on this site have recommended. It is not a particularly costly item.

I use power conditioners in my system (Adept Response) both because they have improved the sound AND the offer surge protection.

Several audiophile friends and retailers have suggested I try my tubed preamp and my amplifiers plugged directly into the wall. I have never been willing to try this as we have a terrible power grid here in Washington DC suburbs (Maryland) and there are lots of surges and we lose power all the time with thunder storms and ice storms and.... you name it.

So: two questions (1) does a whole house surge protector harm sonics in any way; (2) if I have a whole house surge protector, at that point, it seems the experiment (plugging components directly into the wall and seeing if the power conditioners are really helpful or harmful) is feasible.

Does this make sense?

Thanks for your help.

--dan
dgaylin
For anyone not having the budget for a EP 2050 would one of these two be a good option

http://www.apelectric.com/Square-D-QO-Surge-Breaker-p/qo2175sb.htm

OR

http://www.homedepot.ca/product/surgebreaker-plus-whole-house-surge-protector/901424

Would either effect sonics such as maybe strangling current delivery such as I have found with other upstream devices I have tried.
Frank -- it turns out it is really hard to get an EP 2050. I tried contacting the company directly and the distributor. Long story but, after talking to a dealer who used to sell them (and stopped because he didn't see the reason to do it anymore) it became clear to me that these units are not much different from similar units that sell for less. After consulting with my Audiophile electrician (he's a sound man and an audiophile), I determined that the Leviton unit (and there are plenty of others) will work just as well. The unit I bought is still considerably nicer than the stock units that most electricians install for this purpose.
It is good to see that many of us recognize the terrible potential for tragidty when it comes to power line issues. First of all, we are all on a 'party line' that encompasses noise brought in from a wide area. But just as important is the potential for trouble from the line itself, being affected by enviromental issues or power company issues(please excuse my spelling, no spell check available). Anyway, the way I feel about the issue is that a whole house protector is essential in todays power situation. And just as important, it is placed closer to the potential trouble, giving abtter chance of protection.