I want surge protection, but I have no grounds


Hello all, this is my first post.

I am seeking advice on how I should handle a problem with my apartment. I recently upgraded my CD player and have suddenly become concerned about surge protection. Unfortunately, I can't use a surge protector effectively because I have no grounds in my apartment - only 2-prongers.

I read that I could use the grounded adapter plugs to solve this problem. After installing one, my multimeter reads 123V between the hot and neutral, and only 35V between the hot and ground... I believe this means the boxes and conduit are not metal and cannot serve as a ground. I tried again on 3 other outlets with the same results on every attempt.

At this point, the only options I can think of are:

1) Don't worry about it. Surge protection is overrated? One thing I can say is that about a year ago lightning struck a transformer outside the apartments and blew the video card and modem on my computer (no stereo damage fortunately).

2) Rig something up. I heard this was not very smart, but I could run a wire from the ground on the adapter to the drain on my kitchen sink. Hopefully that would give me a solid ground connection, and wouldn't electrocute me in the shower one day.

3) Buy a ground electrode and put it outside my window. Unfortunately, I don't even know what these look like, how much they cost, how hard they are to install, or if the owner would freak out if they found it (I live on second floor).

4) Suggestions? Is there a product or option I haven't heard about? My budget is limited... but spending a little now is better than replacing my entire system later.

Thanks for any help offered,
Will
wtwood
When I was in the same boat a clever electrician wired up the old house with some three prong outlets with one hot and two commons. Can't say exactly how he did it, but he made a jumper for each outlet out of single wires he pulled from a coil of three conductor Romex. He charged about $100 to do 6-8 outlets for one hour's time plus the cost of the outlets.

My primary concern was the owner's manuals for my three pronged equipment that stressed "under no circumstances defeat this ground." The electrician explained that the electric company provided the ground back at the power plant so it was better than nothing. His fix did make the ground lamp on the surge strip illuminate so at least the strip seemed happy. The main trick with this fudge job is making sure the hot polarity gets connected the same way in all the outlets. When it's reversed the ground lamp on the strip won't light. Luckily I discovered a reversal or two while the electrician was still on site so he fixed the ones that got flipped. At the time I didn't have a nifty handheld outlet tester so I can't say what it might have shown.
Will:

Was the 35V hot to ground reading via a painted screw? If so check to see if you get a higher reading to some unpainted threads. A lot of older apartments were wired using conduit systems where the conduit "should" make a good ground. I suspect Rockvirgo's fudge job involved common wiring the ground pin to a neutral wire. Potentially hazardous, against the National Electric Code, and not recommended. Especially dangerous if the circuit is part of a "common neutral" confirguration where the neutral is shared between 2 circuits.
I tried it several ways. With the screw out, directly to the adapter's exposed metal ground connector, and to the adapter's 3rd prong. I really can't explain why I got 35V instead of 0, but after taking the cover plate off the outlet, it looks like a grey plastic box.

I wired up the ground to the kitchen plumbing drain temporarily yesterday just to see what happened, and I got a 120V reading.