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Close lightning destroyed the cordless phone at the weekend, now looking
to get some phone line surge protection. The adsl router survived. One of the Belkin range seems ok for mains / BT telephone sockets but I can't find anything for the RJ 11 lead between the BT ADSL faceplate and the router. ... Or perhaps the ADSL part of the faceplate and / or the router have inbuilt protection and no need to worry ? Chris |
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First you are assuming electricity works like a wave
crashing on the beach. Does the transient enter on phone line, destroy phone, then stop? Of course not. A transient first flows equally through everything in a path from the cloud to ground. Only when that current increases sufficiently, does something in that path (ie. the phone) fail. Second, all appliances have internal protection. Protection that can be overwhelmed if the destructive transient is not earthed BEFORE it can enter the building. To have a destructive transient, the transistorized appliance must have two paths - an incoming and an outgoing path. Portable phone base stations are particularly vulnerable; two paths being AC electric and phone line. So which line did the transient enter on? You have assumed it was the telephone line. Why? Furthermore, do you expect to stop what 3 kilometers of sky could not? That is what ineffective plug-in protector manufacturers hope you will assume. However in N America, every incoming phone line already has a 'whole house' protector installed free by the telco. Does it stop the transient? Of course not. Effective protection does what Ben Franklin demonstrated in 1752. He did not stop lightning. He shunted (diverted) lightning to earth. You must do same. A protector is not protection. An effective protector does same thing as an earthing wire. An effective protector connects the destructive transient to protection. The protector is not protection. Earth ground is protection. The protector is simply a connection from that utility wire to protection. This is what plug-in protectors hope you never learn. You don't know if the transient entered on AC electric to find earth ground via phone line; or visa versa. But we know this. First, a plug-in protector hopes you will assume a protector will stop what 3 kilometers of sky could not. Forget the nonsense promoted by Belkin; who avoids all discussion about earth ground. The concepts of RJ-11 protection were discussed extensively "RJ-11 line protection?" on 30 Dec 2003 through 12 Jan 2004 in pdx.computing at: http://tinyurl.com/2hl53 In the UK, providers of effective protectors for AC electric are: http://www.keison.co.uk/furse/furse06.htm http://www.keison.co.uk/furse/pdf/ma...lies/m2_m4.pdf For phone lines: http://www.one.co.uk/catalogue/teleb...otect/22PX.HTM http://www.keison.co.uk/furse/furse11.htm http://www.keison.co.uk/furse/furse08.htm Notice what every effective protector features: a dedicated wire for a 'less than 3 meter' connection to single point earth ground. An effective protector only connector the transient to protection. How might your phone have been damaged? This figure from the National Institute of Standards and Technology demonstrates how bad earthing caused fax machine damage: http://www.epri-peac.com/tutorials/sol01tut.html Again, the effective protector makes a 'less than 3 meter' dedicated connection to earth ground. Same principle is why BT, connected to overhead wires everywhere in town, need not shutdown during any thunderstorm. You are strongly encouraged to review that previous discussion entitled "RJ-11 line protection?". Earth ground (and not the protector) is protection. No protector is going to stop, block, filter, or absorb the transient that might damage that portable phone base station. Therefore ineffective protectors avoid all discussion about earthing - to make the sale. The protector is only as effective as its earth ground. Kris wrote: > Close lightning destroyed the cordless phone at the weekend, now > looking to get some phone line surge protection. The adsl router > survived. > > One of the Belkin range seems ok for mains / BT telephone sockets > but I can't find anything for the RJ 11 lead between the BT ADSL > faceplate and the router. > > .. Or perhaps the ADSL part of the faceplate and / or the router > have inbuilt protection and no need to worry ? > > Chris |
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> The protector is only as effective as its earth ground. Thanks for the techie stuff, conclusion ... I'll not bother with anything, I could buy 2 adsl routers for the price of the pro protectors. Amazing how Belkin can claim to pay out for surge damaged equipment if their products don't work. perhaps I'll read the small print. Chris |
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Possible that trivial transient was just enough to damage
the phone but not enough to overwhelm ADSL internal protection. Or the phone was protecting ADSL router by earthing a transient. No phone and the next transient may find a destructive path via that ADSL router. Its called a 'canary in the coalmine'. If lightning exists, then spend less money (per protected appliance) for recommended protector or something equivalent. The protector sold by Belkin is typically tens of times more money per protected appliance and does not provide what every appliance requires. All appliances have internal protection. Protection that assumes you have earthed the incoming transient. Earthing that transient so that internal protection is not overwhelmed. Nothing techie about it since I did not even post numbers. It's really quite simple. Effective protection for about £1 per protected appliance. What protects your dishwasher? RCDs. Your clock radio. Dimmer switches. Smoke detector. Furnace and central air controls. Effective protector costs about £1 per protected appliance. 'Whole house' protectors being so inexpensive that N American phone companies install them for free. Without it, next time the ADSL router may not have a portable phone to protect it - or computers adjacent to the ADSL router may not be so lucky. What is one potentially outgoing and destructive path from an ADSL router? Through household computers. That damaged portable phone may be a 'canary in a coalmine'. Effective protection from direct lightning strikes being so inexpensive. What is not mentioned by Belkin is so damning. Which type of transient does it protect from? An effective protector provides protection from all types of transients. A plug-in protector does not claim protection from the typically destructive type of transient, and therefore avoids all discussion about earth ground. How to identify an ineffective protector. 1) Has no dedicated connection to earth ground. 2) Manufacturer avoids all discussion about earthing. Again, a protector is only as effective as its earth ground. Meanwhile, potentially destructive transients occur maybe once every eight years. A number that varies significantly based upon geology and other factors beyond the scope of this discussion. Are you in a high transient location, or is that frequency of transients so low that another may not occur for over 10 years? Just another consideration. Kris wrote: > Thanks for the techie stuff, conclusion ... I'll not bother with > anything, I could buy 2 adsl routers for the price of the pro > protectors. > > Amazing how Belkin can claim to pay out for surge damaged equipment > if their products don't work. perhaps I'll read the small print. > > Chris |
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w_tom wrote:
> Possible that trivial transient was just enough to damage > the phone but not enough to overwhelm ADSL internal > protection. Or the phone was protecting ADSL router by > earthing a transient. No phone and the next transient may > find a destructive path via that ADSL router. Its called a > 'canary in the coalmine'. If lightning exists, then spend > less money (per protected appliance) for recommended protector > or something equivalent. The protector sold by Belkin is > typically tens of times more money per protected appliance and > does not provide what every appliance requires. > > All appliances have internal protection. Protection that > assumes you have earthed the incoming transient. Earthing > that transient so that internal protection is not > overwhelmed. Nothing techie about it since I did not even > post numbers. It's really quite simple. Effective protection > for about £1 per protected appliance. > > What protects your dishwasher? RCDs. Your clock radio. > Dimmer switches. Smoke detector. Furnace and central air > controls. Effective protector costs about £1 per protected > appliance. 'Whole house' protectors being so inexpensive that > N American phone companies install them for free. Without it, > next time the ADSL router may not have a portable phone to > protect it - or computers adjacent to the ADSL router may not > be so lucky. > > What is one potentially outgoing and destructive path from > an ADSL router? Through household computers. That damaged > portable phone may be a 'canary in a coalmine'. Effective > protection from direct lightning strikes being so inexpensive. > > What is not mentioned by Belkin is so damning. Which type > of transient does it protect from? An effective protector > provides protection from all types of transients. A plug-in > protector does not claim protection from the typically > destructive type of transient, and therefore avoids all > discussion about earth ground. > > How to identify an ineffective protector. 1) Has no > dedicated connection to earth ground. 2) Manufacturer avoids > all discussion about earthing. Again, a protector is only as > effective as its earth ground. > > Meanwhile, potentially destructive transients occur maybe > once every eight years. A number that varies significantly > based upon geology and other factors beyond the scope of this > discussion. Are you in a high transient location, or is that > frequency of transients so low that another may not occur for > over 10 years? Just another consideration. Thanks w_tom, I'm now losing the will to live ... do you continually search Usenet for 'surge protection' ? get a life mate ... and top posting irritates many users. |
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On Tue, 24 May 2005 17:41:51 -0400, w_tom <w_tom1@hotmail.com> wrote:
<snip waffle> http://tinyurl.com/7e9us You talk endlessly on newsgroups about power related stuff, but you haven't worked out how to bottom post yet. Jake |
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"w_tom" <w_tom1@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:42939F9E.67ED367E@hotmail.com... > Possible that trivial transient was just enough to damage > <big snip> Hurry up and find your tweezers and magnifying glass and get off this ng ffs. |
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If you did not want the answer, then why did you ask the
question? Kris wrote: > Thanks w_tom, I'm now losing the will to live ... do you continually > search Usenet for 'surge protection' ? get a life mate ... and top > posting irritates many users. |
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On Wed, 25 May 2005 17:07:05 -0400, w_tom <w_tom1@hotmail.com> wrote:
> If you did not want the answer, then why did you ask the >question? > >Kris wrote: >> Thanks w_tom, I'm now losing the will to live ... do you continually >> search Usenet for 'surge protection' ? get a life mate ... and top >> posting irritates many users. I think the OP just wanted a straight answer. Does the facepalce have inbuilt protection? Do I need to get protection? If I do, what do I need to buy? I am sure the OP did not want a thesis on the electical bollocks you gave. A simple yes/no/"this is what you need" would have sufficed. |
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"Kris" <chris.howland@ukgateway.net> wrote in message news:42937bb2$0$93743$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp-reader01.plus.net... > Close lightning destroyed the cordless phone at the weekend, now looking > to get some phone line surge protection. The adsl router survived. > > One of the Belkin range seems ok for mains / BT telephone sockets > but I can't find anything for the RJ 11 lead between the BT ADSL > faceplate and the router. > > .. Or perhaps the ADSL part of the faceplate and / or the router have > inbuilt > protection and no need to worry ? If you are able to use a surge protector between the incoming BT line and your ADLS filter e.g. at the master socket then one surge protector will provide protection for both telephone and ADSL equipment. This is by far the best place to position it. You don't need one explicitly for the RJ11 ADSL connection. There are other surges that come through the mains and the Belkin devices also filter these out as well. I should ignore much of the information you have been given in another part of this thread. There will be no effective protection against a direct lightening strike but electrical storms give rise to voltage surges in telephone wires even if the strike is some considerable distance away from any of the telephone wiring between yourself and the exchange. The amount of energy involved is almost impossible to comprehend. The voltage transients created can be hundreds of thousands of volts (or more) close to a strike and no affordable protection will survive that. The surge dissipates with distance but can still cause transients that damage equipment several miles from the actual strike. The protection devices from Belkin however come with a "Connected Equipment Warranty" so that even if your equipment is damaged at least it will be replaced - has anyone tried to claim by the way? My Mastercube provides warranty protection for £35,000 of connected equipment which is more than enough for normal domestic use. Professional surge protectors may give more protection but I am comfortable with the Belkin unit together with the warranty. By the way it did not affect my ADSL performance when I inserted the surge protector! John Steele www.soroban.co.uk |
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