ZERO SURGE

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How Zero Surge Protection Works

The current limiter (surge reactor) restricts the surge current flow, like a small hole in a pipe. Residual current passing through the current limiter encounters the voltage limiter (bridge). Here the MAJORITY of the current flows into the bridge, because it Offers a far easier path to the surge than the protected circuits (like a fork in a river, most water will flow in the widest/deepest channel). Within this bridge, residual voltage is captured and Stored, then slowly released onto the neutral wire, like a flood tank with a hole in it. Since ground wire diversion is not used, this is Mode 1 suppression, and will not disrupt, damage or shut down interconnected equipment.

Patented Zero Surge circuits reduce the intensity of the surge and spread it over time, like a tennis net converts the high speed energy of a tennis ball into a harmless low grade energy, no matter how hard the ball is hit.

  • Ordinary surge protectors merely divert the surge current without reducing it.

  • Diverted surges are still dangerous and will seek other paths to ground. With interconnected electronics, diverted surges will find such a path through video, audio and data cables which use the ground as an integral part of their circuitry, disrupting the signals or damaging the equipment.

The laws of energy conservation must be obeyed. Unless the energy is reduced, the diverted energy will simply go elsewhere to cause damage.

For networked computers (or modems) that path can be through the delicate dataline circuitry, which is considerably more vulnerable and less surge tolerant than the power supply the undeflected surge would have hit in the first place.


How Ordinary Surge Protectors Work

(Mode 2 - "all modes" operation)

 


 

Ordinary surge protectors (and UPSs) simply divert harmful surge current from the hot line to the neutral and ground wires, in a process usually described as "all three modes of protection."

  • Any surge suppressor which diverts surges to the ground wire is a Mode 2 suppressor, and can disrupt or damage interconnected equipment.

The hot line is the only source of dangerous external surges since neutral and ground are bonded together and fastened to an earth rod at every service entrance.

  • Unfortunately, this "three mode protection" process diverts high energy powerline surges directly into delicate low voltage audio, video and computer datalines, because these lines use the powerline ground wire for their reference voltage.

Computers with modems or datalines to other equipment, such as LANs and shared printers, should never use surge protectors which divert surges to the powerline ground, (Mode 2) because this can slow up networks, degrade audio and video signals and increases the likelihood of damage.

A surge which is not diverted by a surge "protector" will hit the computer's power supply, which is considerably more surge tolerant than the delicate dataline circuitry that Mode 2 suppressors endanger.


 

SPIKE BLOCK -1 (Hard wire Model)
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8R Series - 15 amp unit for preceding a UPS or a power strip
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OPTELATOR Gen II
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Breakermatic 10A/110Vac
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Stand Alone - 15 amp unit for preceding a UPS or a power strip
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