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#122
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I wonder why, since electrical codes in North America and Britain require a ground connection at each outlet; computer power cords are 3 wire? (snip) hot neutral ground |
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#123
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On May 5, 1:44*am, wrote:
In alt.tv.tech.hdtv bud-- wrote:| wrote: | In alt.engineering.electrical Leonard Caillouet wrote:| | wrote in message | ... | | In alt.tv.tech.hdtv Franc Zabkar wrote: | | | | | | The MOVs will act like conductors when they are clamping. *The surge will | | take both paths ... the path through the MOVs, and the path going past the | | MOVs. *In general, about 50% will go each way. *That can vary at higher | | frequencies. | | | | Why would you assume that 50% will go each way when you don't know the | | impedance of each direction? *When conducting, or at failure, the MOV has a | | very low impedance. | | There is a distinction between "go each way" and "what comes back" due to | the impedance. *It will be about 50% that goes each way _because_ the power | itself does not (yet) know the impedance (at a distance), until it gets | there. | | Another installment of Phil's Phantasy Physics using transmission line | theory. Not understanding it is your loss. I have to agree that this is Phantasy Physics. We're supposed to believe that a surge reaching a MOV is going to split 50-50, with half of it going to the MOV path and half moving on down the line, reagrdless of the impedance of the two paths? That would render all surge protection about 50% effective. | Two sources directly contradict Phil. What sources? *Your truncated out of context quotes? | Phil has provided no sources to support phantasy physics. I don't care. -- |WARNING: Due to extreme spam, I no longer see any articles originating from *| | * * * * Google Groups. If you want your postings to be seen by more readers | | * * * * you will need to find a different place to post on Usenet. * * * * *| | Phil Howard KA9WGN (email for humans: first name in lower case at ipal.net) | |
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#124
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Ο "Tantalust" έγραψε στο μήνυμα . .. "NB" wrote in message ... Who is W_TOM and why has he appeared in every single thread that has contained those keywords since 2001??? He an obsessive-compulsive disorder victim, apparently driven by some kind of bizarre fetish involving ground rods. What kind of ground rods? I prefer steel core, copper clad ones:-) I even have the special heavy hammer -- Tzortzakakis Dimitrios major in electrical engineering mechanized infantry reservist hordad AT otenet DOT gr |
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#125
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On May 5, 10:54*am, "Dave" wrote:
I wonder why, since electrical codes in North America and Britain require a ground connection at each outlet; computer power cords are 3 wire? (snip) hot neutral ground Meanwhile, I'm still waiting for an explanation from w_ about how surege protection inside that computer can work? Where is that direct connection to earth ground, without which w_ says surge protection is impossible? Does the computer have a mythical earth ground inside? The answer is it doesn't. It is acting under exactly the same limitations and uses the same components, typically MOVs to do what a plug-in surge supressor does. w-'s answer to this is to claim that electronics, appliances, etc do not use MOVs, a claim previously smashed, because of course they do. Plus it really has nothing much to do with the question anyway, because the computer, appliance, etc still HAS NO DIRECT EARTH GROUND, without which w- says protection is impossible. |
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#126
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In article ,
Dave wrote: I wonder why, since electrical codes in North America and Britain require a ground connection at each outlet; computer power cords are 3 wire? (snip) hot neutral ground or, as we call it, Live, Neutral & Earth -- From KT24 - in "Leafy Surrey" Using a RISC OS computer running v5.11 |
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#127
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#128
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On Mon, 5 May 2008 19:21:16 +0300, "Tzortzakakis Dimitrios"
wrote: Ο "Tantalust" έγραψε στο μήνυμα ... "NB" wrote in message ... Who is W_TOM and why has he appeared in every single thread that has contained those keywords since 2001??? He an obsessive-compulsive disorder victim, apparently driven by some kind of bizarre fetish involving ground rods. What kind of ground rods? I prefer steel core, copper clad ones:-) I even have the special heavy hammer I'm on 2000' of sand, and at the moment, my house earth is the copper water pipes, but the water corp keep adding plastic bits here and there, so I don't really trust it. I was going to hammer in a 20' length of 3/4" copper pipe under a large tree which gets the drain from my grey water. Probably the best I can do. I'm not a full bottle on earth loops yet so i don't know about leaving the water mains connection still connected. What's the best way to test an earth? I heard once that a large electric radiator (fire) connected between active (hot) and the earth will glow as per normal if the earth has good capacity. Perhaps a current comparison between the earth return and neutral return would be more informative? jack |
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#129
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On Mon, 5 May 2008 09:24:41 -0400, "Tantalust"
wrote: "w_tom" wrote Yes, plug-in protectors do have limited protective functions. Look at poor w_tom starting his back-pedalling. Back-pedalling, back-pedalling, back-pedalling. As I understand it, there is not "protection", or "no protection" That is, it is not black and white, but degrees of protection, as there are degrees of surge, or spike. There is absolute protection of whole of house costing many thousands of dollars, with tinfoil hats thrown in at no extra cost ![]() And there is $7 protection against weeny little spikes/surges, and then there is everything in between at varying prices. The old saw "you get what you pay for" is generally bull**** IMHO You get what the ******* will let you get away with IME jack |
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#130
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In article , Jitt
writes I wonder why, since electrical codes in North America and Britain require a ground connection at each outlet; computer power cords are 3 wire? Many older domestic installations in N America are two-wire only (no ground.) In the UK and much of Europe, all outlets are grounded, so surge protectors do work effectively. w_tom has been informed of this fact many times but continues telling blatant lies, spreading FUD, and misrepresenting what others write. -- (\__/) Bunny says NO to Windows Vista! (='.'=) http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut00...ista_cost.html (")_(") http://www.cypherpunks.to/~peter/vista.pdf |
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