What a difference 20 years makes
- Whole house units are required as of the National Electric Code (NEC) 2020 and they can save your life and home. Details below.
- Several surge protection brands have come around to focusing on low let through voltages instead of joules. This approach is something ZeroSurge has been on the leading edge of for decades in the semi-pro/pro space.
All of the surge protectors I am recommending have let through voltages of less than 200. Getting low let through voltages used to be something only exotic brands like ZeroSurge had but now it's widely available in more affordable units.
The let through voltage of a surge protector is how high a voltage would have to occur before the protection circuits even notice it is happening. Circuits which limit the let through voltages are key for several reasons:
- They work to slow down the surge, reducing the current that flows through your strip and therefore the home wiring.
- They improves the reliability of the surge protector. The same surge won't dissipate as many joules, so you can think of this as a joule magnifier.
- They start working at a much lower voltage protecting your equipment
- They add some noise filtering since they are essentially low pass filters.
Joules Don't Matter
Cheap Strips Can Cause a Fire
- They will blow up with flames shooting out of them (really)
- They will cause so much current to flow through your home wiring that it can melt the wiring in the wall and start a fire in there.
Recommendations
Best for General Use
Best for Audio and Home Theater
Networking
Whole House
Having said that the Leviton brand of whole house surge suppressors are not bad either.
Details
I first installed a whole house suppressor near Boston in around 2000. The goal was to protect the air conditioners and woodworking equipment I had. At the time these were considered accessories but 20 years later the National Electric Code has made these mandatory in new or upgraded installations. I was curious as to why and thankfully I found the great State of Minnesota posted an explainer:
I quot them thus:
During the 2020 NEC code cycle it was substantiated that surge protective devices are necessary to protect against home fires and personal injury. For the typical home, surge protective devices also provide protection for all the sensitive electronic systems, a variety of different equipment, appliances, lifesaving apparatus such as smoke alarms and carbon-monoxide detectors, overcurrent devices such as GFCIs, AFCIs, and much more.
The important most important point here is is the fire protection. A big enough surge coming from the power company can induce enough current in the wiring in the wall to cause a fire which could possibly smoulder in the walls before engulfing your home in the middle of the night. Also, being at the meter or in the panel these surge protectors can channel a ton of current to ground safely, much better this current happen here than at your PC or TV. That surge current would travel through much thinner and longer wires.
The secondary considerations here are that we have a number of important and delicate systems in our homes which are now directly wired in, like fire alarms, smart thermostats, remote lights, etc. in addition to major appliances. Major appliances can take a hit here and there but will eventually wear down after repeated smaller strikes.
Do not substitute a whole house protector for a surge strip. Use both. Here is why:
- The best whole house surge protectors clamp around 500 to 600 volts. The surge strips I am recommending clam around 140 to 190 volts.
- While the whole house protector wont' clamp until 500-600 volts it WILL take on very high currents safer than the surge strips you plug in at the wall.
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