Xref: utzoo unix-pc.general:7210 comp.sys.att:11464 Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!yale!umich!sharkey!cfctech!teemc!hpftc!slimer!mco From: mco@slimer.UUCP (Mark C. Otto) Newsgroups: unix-pc.general,comp.sys.att Subject: Re: Brownouts, shorts, explosions and the unix pc. Message-ID: <2426@slimer.UUCP> Date: 10 Jan 91 03:34:11 GMT References: <134@limbic.ssdl.com> <1991Jan7.084738.7441@yenta.alb.nm.us> <1991Jan7.124138.19055@ims.alaska.edu> Organization: Versatile Systems, Inc. Lines: 28 In article <1991Jan7.124138.19055@ims.alaska.edu> floyd@ims.alaska.edu (Floyd Davidson) writes: > [ ... lots of good stuff deleted ... ] >If you do want to do something along these lines, wrap a couple >turns through a high Q toriodal core. ... Yes! I have seen coils used effectively with MOV's (per Gil's mention earlier) to provide reasonable amounts of protection at low cost. If you want to see how things can go awry, read Jerry Pournelle's "Chaos Manor" column in Byte Magazine ... uh ... oops! I forgot the issue ... uh, suffice it to say a lightning strike took out a high voltage line and put it squarely in contact with the 220V feed to his neighborhood. He details the types of protection he had and what types of stuff survived and what didn't. In general MOV/coil circuits handle lightning strikes if they are several miles away or on the other side of a step-down transformer. More serious stuff - like what happened to Mr. Pournelle - can only be dealt with properly via an UPS, preferably with an isolation transformer and a good over-voltage trip circuit. I feel good power protection is like buying insurance for your computer - you can go without it, but the downside risk can have devastating potential. -- Mark C. Otto EMail: mco@slimer, {teemc | hpftc}!slimer!mco Voice: 1-313-441-4264 USnail: 5133 Heather #208, Dearborn, MI. 48126 Quote: "Yeah. Right. Kermit my a*s." - Mark C. Otto, '90