Thanks for the additional info. I still suggest a whole house and individual surge protectors are better than nothing.
Can you recommend any whole-house devices for these prolonged spikes?
Is My System Toast?
The electricity in my town went out the other day for a short time. My wife was in the living room where my stereo system is. The amp is a Bel Canto eVO2i and a pair of Quad 12L2 speakers. She told me that when the power came back on that the left speaker crackled and smoked a little. When I looked, it had a constant low but discernible hum. I tried the speakers and they were dead. I switched the amp input to my CD player (which had been completely powered down) and there was no sound. Are the speakers and amp pretty much gone? Is it worth having the amp looked at for possible repair?
Just what I mentioned in my last post. There are two whole house Type 2 SPD that draw a lot of attention on audio forums. The Eaton 108kA Whole Home Surge Protection Device (CHSPT2ULTRA) From their warranty:
I have the Eaton (CHSPT2ULTRA) . Siemens Boltshield FSPD 140kA, Single Phase, Type-2 Surge Protective Device
. Note, neither will protect from an overvoltage event. Usually what happens a temporary overvoltage will fry a type 2 whole house SPD. Point of use Type 3 as well. .
. Overvoltage Therein a temporary overvoltage.
People will blame a whole house SPD for not protecting electronic devices in the home when there is a Utility Power Failure. The SPD is not designed to protect if there is an overvoltage event that lasts for more than milliseconds in duration. . |
I am not aware of one that would work like a whole house Type 2 SPD, (Surge Protection Device). How would you clamp a temporary, sustained, overvoltage? The overvoltage surge is real available power... A temporary, sustained, overvoltage event could last seconds, minutes or longer... It’s not like a high voltage transient surge that has a life span in microseconds. (Going from memory the Eaton Type 2 SPD reacts to a high voltage transient surge in one nano second or less. That’s fast! And that’s why the big name manufacturers use Multiple MOVs in their Type 2 SPDs. Not all temporary, sustained overvoltage events are caused from Utility Power coming back on Line. (And that doesn’t happen every time.) Some overvoltage events are caused by high voltage power lines coming down on low voltage power lines. Causes? Wind, fires, falling big tree limbs, vehicles hitting power poles. Then another, more localized temporary, sustained overvoltage event is a loose and or corroded, or open, neutral service conductor. This can be at the secondary side of the Utility Power Transformer, at the overhead service weather head connection, in the meter socket, or at the main electrical service equipment panel. A loose and or corroded, or open, service neutral can take out audio equipment pretty quick. Along with any other electronic devices on the higher voltage Hot leg.
Town ? Not City? Small town? May be with its own Generating Power Plant? |