Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Home Office Surge Protection

Home Office Surge Protection


Many of today’s small businesses are run from home offices. When your livelihood depends on your home office equipment running smoothly protecting it from surge damage is a wise investment. Even if you do not own a small business the home office is generally a command center for paying bills and children completing school work. Avoid the nuisance of equipment damage. Protect your home office equipment by preventing surge damage with surgeassureTM Home Office Surge Protection. 

To fully protect your Home Office surgeassureTM has created the Main and Interior Zone – Home Office surge protection package. The Home Office surge protection package includes: 

(a) Main Zone surge protection products (TE/1C40, SAT1, & SAVFFF

(b) Four Single outlet surge protectors (SAP1) for protecting appliances and additional Home Office equipment 

(c) Plug Strip surge protector (SAS8T2V2) for equipment such as fax machines telephones, printers/copiers & scanners 

(d) UPS (SA550VA) Uninterruptible Power Supply – perfect for your computer PC and monitor 




Friday, September 14, 2012

Installing a Whole Home Surge Protector

TE/1C40 Whole Home panel surge protector
If you are familiar with basic electrical wiring then installing a Whole home panel surge protector is a relatively simple task. But, be warned that most product warranties, like the surgeassure product warranty, require that a qualified electrician install the product for the warranty to be valid. These tips are intended for qualified electricians. 

Surge protector installation diagram


Installation of whole home surge protectors require a breaker to connect to the electrical system. For the TE/1C40 whole home panel surge protector a 20A, 2-pole breaker is required because the product is prewired with a #12AWG. Conductors must be matched to an appropriate breaker size. Frequently people ask do I need to install this in a breaker slot positioned at the top of the breaker box? The answer is no. Install the p
rotector on a 2-pole breaker at any point within the breaker box but make sure that breaker position is in close proximity to the knockout that connects the surge protector to the breaker box in order to maintain short and straight leads. Long lead lengths increase the let through voltage of the surge protector which affects its performance. 
  
TE/1C40 surge protector wiring
For complete and detailed instructions on installing the TE/1C40 check out its installation manual.