T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1229.1 | Cheap Insurance | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN2 | Tue Mar 08 1988 09:02 | 15 |
| Re .0:
As the quoted note says, it is easy to provide surge protection on a
"do-it-yourself" basis. I suspect most people use a power strip
anyway, so it's *definitely* worth one's while to open it up and
install 3 MOVs across the two leads and protective ground.
If you buy a strip which claims to provide surge protection, you should
check to see that it has all three MOVs. Many of them use only one or
two MOVs; some protection is better than none, but it's better to wear
a belt *and* suspenders in this case. You should also make sure that
your outlet has a *real* ground, or you won't have any real protection.
Radio Shack #276-570 (Standard) is $1.59/ea. #276-568 (Heavy-Duty)
sells for $1.99/ea. They're both cheap insurance.
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1229.2 | SCHEMATIC PLEASE ANYONE | POLAR::GOSLING | KANATA MFG I.S. | Tue Mar 08 1988 09:23 | 16 |
|
I remember the article in BYTE, but being less than a visionary,
through it out along with the issue. With all the hardware I have
plugged into my power bar (I take the North American power grid
down a few notches everytime time I flip the switch), I would
sleep alot better knowing that I was protected somewhat from the
elements.
Could someone with an understanding of Hots and Grounds, please
draw up a quick schematic of the MOV placements for us (me?)
non-technical types.
Thanks in advance.
Art
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1229.3 | Go for it! | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN2 | Tue Mar 08 1988 11:36 | 25 |
| Re .2:
My artwork leaves something to be desired, but here goes...
=========================+================+-------+
"Hot" (black wire) : | :
MOV | :
: | :
=========================+====== [] [] =+ MOV
"Neutral" (white wire) : :
MOV (_) :
: | :
=========================+==========+-------------+
"Ground" (green wire)
The point is that there are three wires (hot, neutral & ground)
and that MOVs should be installed between each pair thereof. In
theory, the Neutral wire is at ground potential, but all bets are
off during electrical storms and heavy load situations.
When you do your connections, you may find it easiest to use any excess
screw terminals you find on the outlets in your power strip. The
ground screw is supposed to be painted green for easy identification;
the "hot" side of the outlet is metallic yellow, while the "neutral"
side is metallic white.
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1229.4 | MANY THANKS | POLAR::GOSLING | KANATA MFG I.S. | Tue Mar 08 1988 11:54 | 7 |
|
Bill,
Artwork is great - thanks!
Art
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1229.5 | Thanks! | CIMNET::KYZIVAT | Paul Kyzivat | Tue Mar 08 1988 16:35 | 15 |
| Great! I figured that someone here would understand this stuff. Sounds like a
much better deal than $100 for a commercial unit.
Is there a right way and a wrong way to install a MOV? (In other words, are the
two leads equivalent, or different like a diode?) If the power strip is fused,
which side of the fuse should the MOVs go?
When you get done, how do you know if it really works? And what are the
symptoms when a surge actually occurs?
Is there anything else you get in a high quality (expensive) power strip? There
is mention in the original note of hash protection - is that RFI? Is it
important to deal with it?
Paul
|
1229.6 | MOVs and Filters | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN2 | Wed Mar 09 1988 13:36 | 33 |
| Re .5:
> Is there a right way and a wrong way to install a MOV? (In other
> words, are the two leads equivalent, or different like a diode?) If
> the power strip is fused, which side of the fuse should the MOVs go?
MOVs don't have polarity. (We're dealing with AC here, right?)
I'd put the MOVs after the circuit breaker/fuse only for the reason
that I'd hope the MOV could overload same (before its own death)
in the event that a sustained high voltage appeared on the line.
> When you get done, how do you know if it really works? And what are
> the symptoms when a surge actually occurs?
I'm afraid you don't. If you want to put a neon bulb in series
with the MOV, it would light in the event the MOV passes a current.
Without the MOV, the symptom of a power surge could well be the
death of something inside your Amiga.
> Is there anything else you get in a high quality (expensive) power
> strip? There is mention in the original note of hash protection - is
> that RFI? Is it important to deal with it?
Where an MOV presents a short circuit to short-term voltage spikes
(diverting them through the "path of least resistance" to where they
won't do any damage), other power defects can occur. High frequency
noise on the line won't be filtered off by the MOV, but could well find
its way through the power supply to mess up the voltages inside your
equipment. RFI (Radio Frequency Interference) can have the effect of
inserting signals into the circuitry, resulting in unpredictable
results. These filters are intended to cancel such noise before it
reaches the power supply. If you add such a filter, put it *after* the
MOVs, so the amplitude is chopped before the filter gets it.
|
1229.7 | Where's the surge coming from? | WHYVAX::KRUGER | | Wed Mar 09 1988 14:41 | 7 |
| What are the specs on the MOV's? Would two in parallel across each
line be better? Could you simply install them at your fuse box?
(It seems to me that if they are protecting your house from a shock
coming in on the line, you might as well protect the whole house,
right?
dov
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1229.8 | Obviously Not A Machine Instruction | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Mar 09 1988 15:51 | 6 |
| I don't really need to know this to take advantage of all that's
been said here, but could somebody please deacronymize (pardon my
verbification) "MOV"? Thanks,
len.
|
1229.9 | Do it right | MQFSV2::DESROSIERS | Tout est possible | Wed Mar 09 1988 16:12 | 17 |
| MOV's are specified as to the voltage they become conductive AND
how many joules they will absorb like so 150{letter}10 = conducts
at 150 volts and will withstand 10 joules (I don't know what the
letter stands for). We (DEC) make the H7007 series and they are
quite good but too expensive for non-clients, so it is best to brew
your own. If you do deceide to make your own, make sure that the
wires used are of heavy enough caliber (like 12 Ga.) AND make sure
that the outlet used is PROPERLY GROUNDED. This means NO ground
wires separate from the phase and neutral wires, in fact the best
thing you could do is to run a size 12 from the panel box to an
outlet that has the MOV's mounted inside and plug your Amiga into
that. For people in heavy thunder storm areas, it is best to unplug
the computer anyway, a first strike could take out the MOV's and
then no protection is assured.
Jean
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1229.10 | Metal Oxide Varistor | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN2 | Wed Mar 09 1988 16:32 | 9 |
| Re .7, .8:
MOV = Metal Oxide Varistor. Physically, the MOVs sold by Radio Shack
look like disk capacitors.
MOVs should be near the device being protected. A nearby lightning
strike could easily induce a substantial voltage in the wiring between
the circuit breaker box and your system. MOVs in the breaker box
wouldn't help in such a case.
|
1229.11 | run that by again please... | CIMNET::KYZIVAT | Paul Kyzivat | Wed Mar 09 1988 17:40 | 31 |
| Re: .6
> MOVs don't have polarity. (We're dealing with AC here, right?)
> I'd put the MOVs after the circuit breaker/fuse only for the reason
> that I'd hope the MOV could overload same (before its own death)
> in the event that a sustained high voltage appeared on the line.
I don't follow you. By "after the circuit breaker" do you mean between
the circuit breaker and the wall, or between the circuit breaker and
the amiga? I can't tell if you are suggesting that the MOV will might
protect the circuit breaker or visa versa.
Re: .?
I gather that when a MOV is overloaded it burns out and becomes a
no-op. Thus, you could take a power hit and blow the MOVs without
knowing it. Forever after you would have no protection and not know
it. Is this right? The same could occur if you had a faulty MOV to
start with. Doesn't seem like very secure protection.
I was totally lost on the discussion about having a 12ga line direct to
the breaker box, and warnings about multiple grounds, etc. Does this
mean that MOVs in a power strip might not help depending on how the
house wiring is configured? Also, about using 12ga to wire in the
MOVs: are these not devices with leads of their own, like a resistor?
If so, do they have 12ga leads?
This is all very helpful, though the issues seem to be getting more
complex rather than more clear.
Paul
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1229.12 | Some clarifications | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN2 | Wed Mar 09 1988 22:25 | 20 |
| Re .11:
In .6 I was talking about where the MOVs should be relative to the
circuit breaker/fuse *within a power strip*. There's no compelling
reason to put them either ahead or behind the breaker; I simply opted
for placing them after same and speculated that under a sustained high
voltage condition the MOV might draw enough current to trip the breaker
(if it doesn't burn up first).
In the event an MOV *does* take a big surge and dies, you won't know
about it. I'd hope this is a rare occurrence. Some of the commercial
products have an MOV status light (LED?) but I'm not sure how it's
wired. You're right; a dead MOV is a non-entity electrically.
We've repeatedly talked about providing MOVs in a "delta" configuration
-- which requires three MOVs and a good ground wire. If the ground is
inadequate, the two MOVs which connect to it don't provide any
protection. The National Electrical Code is pretty explicit about how
grounding should be done. My recommendation is DON'T CHEAT and you'll
be just fine.
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1229.13 | | MQFSV2::DESROSIERS | Tout est possible | Thu Mar 10 1988 10:20 | 28 |
| The idea behind 12 Ga wire is to provide a low impedence path to
the breaker box and thus to the ground which should be connected
to the neutral (in the box) and to a "good ground" (water pipe or
rod driven in the ground). Low impedence is further afforded by
having the wires (phase neutral & ground) in a bundle, thus the
magnetic field created by current flowing in one wire is cancelled
by the return in the other wire, if the ground wire is separate
from the current carrying conductors (phase & neutral) and a fault
occurs, be it a spike or a malfunction, the wires become inductors
and enough impedence is present in the wires to impair the performance
of the MOV's.
The way our H7007's are made is like so:
----------FUSE----MOV------
| |
-neon lamp--
If the MOV shorts out, the fuse blows and the neon lamp lights.
If the MOV opens, you won't know! The installation requires that
the thing be placed no more than 3 feet from the panel, if it placed
further, less protection is afforded.
I am running out of time and out of breath....
Jean
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