whole house surge protector


Hi all-

I'm having some electrical work done on my house and my electrician is recommending that he install a whole house surge protector on the electrical panel.  This seems like a good idea, but I am wondering if I will experience any negative effects in terms of sound quality on my stereo system?  (I do currently have my audio system on a dedicated line.)

Thanks!

mcanaday

One thing to note about the Breaker type that are installed in the panel

  • they have to be in the very first position
    • i.e. right beside the the panel main breaker switch
    • so you might have to move some wires
  • your electrician should know this

I was offered two different types

  1. appliance grade - $150 installed
  2. electronics grade - $375 installed

I went with #1, because

  • I generally unplug my system when there is a storm
  • other household electronics - TV’s, modems, routers, computers etc... are all protected by UPS devices

Regards - Steve

  • they have to be in the very first position
    • i.e. right beside the the panel main breaker switch
    • so you might have to move some wirs

 

The difference between the first and last position in terms of propogation of voltage is really very small. The speed of electricity assuming a 2' long back plane means that a surge propogates in about 2 nanoseconds. MOV’s typically have response times around 100 nanoseconds.

So, sure, put it at the top if you can, but practically speaking it’s about he same in either location.

The issue might be inductive reactance.  Inductance is likely in order of 300nH/ft.  It is not a lot but even the smallest reactance with thousands of amperes clamped (my Boltshields are rated 60kA each) will produce big voltage drop.  Sensitive circuitry powered closer to the power entry will see this as additional voltage on the top of already high clamping voltage.   Same goes for plain resistance of the copper bar in the panel.  Even if total resistance is in order of 10mohm it will produce 100V drop at 10kA current.  We're talking extremely short spikes (1-30us) of huge energy.  It is always good practice to place clamping device like MOV or TVS close to power entry.

This is so helpful and you guys are great!  I will tell my electrician to go ahead with whole house surge protector.

Thank you!

Margot