cleeds has not even asked what 'single point earth ground' means. And somehow is an expert? Single point earth ground must both meet and exceed code requirements. As was clearly obvious. He could change tact and start learning what these expressions really mean. But he won't. Some people get attached to what advertising has told them. And then are incapable of learning science; learning how easy advertising brainwashes.
Single point earth ground is standard in every facility that does not have damage. Even implemented in the earliest days of telephones so that operators worked without harm through every thunderstorm.
cleeds is an example of one entrenched by propaganda. Unable to learn simple science concepts that even Ben Franklin demonstrated in 1752. A classic naysayer who knows only he is right. He cannot even post one manufacturer specification number.
Plenty more to learn. Blackouts and brownouts do not damage hardware. Most anomalies are already made irrelevant by what is inside electronics. Anomalies that can overwhelm existing protection are rare. So informed consumers spend $1 per protected appliance on protection that is far superior to any 'magic' plug-in' box. Since strip protectors can even compromise superior protection inside appliances if not used in conjunction with a proven and properly earthed 'whole house' solution.
A simple rule applies. Protection is always about where hundreds of thousands of joules harmlessly dissipate. A protector is only as effective as its earth ground.
Single point earth ground is standard in every facility that does not have damage. Even implemented in the earliest days of telephones so that operators worked without harm through every thunderstorm.
cleeds is an example of one entrenched by propaganda. Unable to learn simple science concepts that even Ben Franklin demonstrated in 1752. A classic naysayer who knows only he is right. He cannot even post one manufacturer specification number.
Plenty more to learn. Blackouts and brownouts do not damage hardware. Most anomalies are already made irrelevant by what is inside electronics. Anomalies that can overwhelm existing protection are rare. So informed consumers spend $1 per protected appliance on protection that is far superior to any 'magic' plug-in' box. Since strip protectors can even compromise superior protection inside appliances if not used in conjunction with a proven and properly earthed 'whole house' solution.
A simple rule applies. Protection is always about where hundreds of thousands of joules harmlessly dissipate. A protector is only as effective as its earth ground.