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|    comp.dcom.telecom    |    Telecommunications digest. (Moderated)    |    17,262 messages    |
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|    Message 16,730 of 17,262    |
|    Thomas Horne to Telecom Digest Moderator    |
|    Re: [telecom] Re: Wall Wart Solutions (A    |
|    19 Nov 22 11:03:11    |
      From: hornetd@remove-this.gmail.com              ************************** Moderator's Note **************************       * *       * When I get posts on subjects I don't know many details for, I turn *       * to experts who can provide advice. One such person is my brother, *       * Thomas Horne: he is a retired Master Residential Wireman who lives *       * in Maryland. *       * *       **********************************************************************              Bill              I'm putting my replies in line so I don't miss something.              On 2022-11-15 13:18, Telecom Digest Moderator wrote:       > Tom,       >       > Please answer a couple of questions for me, and let me know if your       > advice may be published. TIA.       >       > 1. Is "surge protection" ever necessary for Ethernet or "cable"       > connections? Would you recommend it?              In the absence of a whole house surge protection installation and for       certain equipment even with whole house surge protection I would       recommend surge protection for any circuit that uses metal conductors.              For any valuable device or one you would really prefer not to have to       do without I would use surge protection that covered every conductor       that enters the device or one of it's peripherals.              > 2. Isn't it cheaper and simpler to just get a long outlet strip and       > plug all my wall-warts into that? What do 3-or-4-foot-long outlet       > strips cost?              I don't have current pricing in my head but the cost is bearable.       Using a cord and plug connected piece of Plugmold on the back of your       desk or anywhere else you have several wall warts is how I would do       it. You can then supply the strip of Plugmold through a good quality       surge protector.              > 3. Come to think of it, do tiny transformers feeding miniscule loads       > ever *need* surge protection?              That will depend on what the wall wart supplies and how it is built.       Since it is very hard to know the answer to the second question I       would protect every one that supplies something that also has other       wires running to or from it. The whole idea here is to avoid any sharp       difference in voltage that will go higher than the withstand rating of       the insulation and components used if it has 2 different conductor       pathways connected to it protect them at a common point to a common       bonding point. That doesn't mean that you have to buy an expensive       purpose built protector which is all that and the bag of chips.       Several robust single purpose surge protectors which are bonded to a       single connection point will often cost so much less than an       all-in-one that you can afford to buy better protection.              Tom              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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