Brad,

Reread my message again.
I have experienced a power surge which damaged my TV.
I don't live in the boonies or a 3rd world country, but a nice suburb of 
Chicago.
I paid $160 to have the TV fixed, and
nothing for the computer because of the surge protector.
We were running both of these devices at the time of the spike.

If you are experiencing uninterrupted electric service you are fortunate.
I feel the electric service has grown much less reliable in the past 50 years.
In the past, we had surplus power capacity.  The only outage we saw in my 
childhood was from storms taking power lines down or lightening strikes on 
pole mounted transformers.  Today we experience 3-4 brownouts per summer when 
the temperatures go up and air conditioning needs drain the electric supply.  
This was unheard of in the past.

Regards,  Bob S.

In a message dated 10/13/02 6:32:13 PM Central Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< Surge protectors are fine, I use them, but more like additional power
 outlets.  Do you know why these companies have insurance or guarantees of
 various sums?  Because they rarely happen.  Any *real* power surge, be it a
 power company failure or due to a lightning strike, do you know what
 happens?  They simply just jump the surge barrier.  In that case, you are in
 trouble, but there is nothing you can do against it besides unplugging every
 component after use.  The upside?  This rarely happens.
 
 
 ----- Original Message -----
 From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 Sent: Sunday, October 13, 2002 7:18 PM
 Subject: Re: A must read! (WAS Re: Digital-only labs)
 
 
 > Wendy,
 >
 > Get that surge protector into use.  Buy two, they are cheap!
 >
 > Back when I had a computer with Pentium I chip, I saw a flash outside the
 > basement window and the power went out.  An underground transformer across
 > the street had blown, but not before spiking the voltage.  When the power
 > came back up, the computer was fine (protected by the surge protector),
 but
 > the TV in the bedroom wasn't.  $160 later, we had the appropriate chips in
 > the TV replaced.  It has a surge protector now too!
 >
 > I like what John Coyle said about the chips in the hard drives or the
 > controllers.  The disc platters themselves are magnetic metal and probably
 > not capable of being damaged by a power surge.  The wee electronic chips
 are
 > another matter.  Short of buying US Department of Defense, hardened
 against
 > Electromagnetic Pulses chips, this gear needs surge protection.
 >
 > Regards,  Bob S.
 > >>

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