Re: clamp-on ground resistance measurements
Karl,Thank you for your interest in my comments.
Surge protection is of increasing importance in residential homes due to the proliferation of sensitive digital and analog electronics used in: TV's,fax,telephones,VCR's,printers,refrigerators,microwaves,washing machines,water sofeners,personal computers,and LAN's.Fatalities have actually occured in situations where a telephone was being used during a lightning storm.It is very common to loose a VCR after an electrical storm. Prior to installing my surge suppresor I lost 3 VCR's and 2 telephones and 2 TV's over a 10 year period all of them after an electrical storms.The magnitude of a surge voltage is a function of the inductive parameters of the distributed circuits,the spectral content of the surge and the amplitude of the strike.These 3 components combine to determine the voltage the suppresor device must deal with.The suppresor device is essentially a threshold trggered switch directing the energy in the surge to ground where ground is path of low resistance with the capacity to provide a sink for dissipation of the energy.If the ground is not low resistance the clamp or switch will not effectively short circuit the voltage to to a low enough level to protect the electronics in the home.The reason the electronics fail is due to voltages which have not been clamped to ground or a zero potential.When I used the word safety I was thinking about the safety of equipment and people.