A basic surge protector uses a capacitor.  Once the capacitor is at capacity it becomes a basic extension cord.

Charles Jones <charles.jones@ciscolearning.org> wrote:
I had 3 PCs running 24/7, one of them was on a UPS, and the other 2 had surge protectors. They all equally failed.  I think the house just hated technology. :-)

Kevin Brown wrote:
Consider yourself lucky.  At my old house, there was something funky 
with the power, because I went through about 8 power supplies, even good
expensive ones. At the end I was buying cheapo $29 cases from Frys just
to get the power supply out of them (and then recycled the case).

My new house isn't quite as bad, but I've gone through 3 power supplies
here so far, including one that literally exploded and shot a cloud of
plasma-like fire out of it. Talk about an eye-opener at 3am :)
 You would have been better off spending all that money on a line  conditioner/surge protector.  I have a line conditioner at my place and  it occasionally indicates a spike or drop in the line voltage and  corrects for it.  Haven't lost a power supply yet that couldn't be  anything other than the result of basic age. --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss   

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