On 5/26/07, Ian Pascoe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Hi Robin

You've a number of alternatives - as always - and it depends on what you
got
to spend.

Firstly, looking at the mains supply.  If you're in such an en-lightening
area, unless your place is on top of a hill, I would have thought you'd
want
to protect everything, so get an electrician to install a protection unit
between the meter and the distribution board.  Alternatively, and perhaps
in
addition, add surge protection to your mains outlets using plug ins.

BT provides Line Conditioning Units for exactly your scenario - although I
don't know if they're compatible with BB / ADSL.

Alternatively, belkin, I think, makes a 4 gang socket surge protection
with
an inbuilt telephone socket.

Normal disclaimer applies to all above.

Oh, and of course the other option is to move!

Ian

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Robin Menneer
Sent: 25 May 2007 21:30
To: British Ubuntu Talk
Subject: Re: [ubuntu-uk] Preventing lightning strike & surges


On 5/25/07, luxxius <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Alan Pope wrote:
> > Call me picky, but isn't it true that you can't *prevent* lightning
> > strikes, only try to get them to hit something other than your
> > aerial/golf club/tree/car/house?
>
> My only experience of a lightning strike was lightning hitting the
> telegraph pole down the street, sending a big pulse down the phone line,
> and frying the fax modem on my motherboard (along with its nearby
> on-board network and the graphics).  I guess surge protection wouldn't
> help with that sort of thing?
>
> By the way, hello!  I'm a relative newcomer to Ubuntu (about four months
> now).  I have Dapper running on my old Inspiron latptop (including
> wireless on a Linksys card with Broadcom chipset, which I was very
> pleased to get working in only a fortnight!).
>
> And now I've put Feisty on an old AMD box, and recently as a dual boot
> on my Dell Dimension (with XP, which I keep for occasional bits of stuff
> that are still easier for me on XP, till I get better at GNU/Linux).
>
> But I find I rarely use that other OS at all;  and I've been sort of
> surprised to find that I don't miss it, and - contrary to long-term
> brainwashing (20 years, I guess) - I don't actually need it!  Freedom!
>
> Ubuntu's really good - but I have to be careful not to bore my kids and
> friends to death going on about it!
>
> --
> Diana
>
>We've sat watching a fireball from lightning in the same room, frying
the Orange box which took 5 weeks to replace, followint innumerable
phone calls.  And it is a bore switching everything off whenever there
is a thunderstorm in the area.  What are the relative merits of the
various means of protection ?   Robin
>
>
> --
> ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
> https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
> https://wiki.kubuntu.org/UKTeam/
>

Thanks for advices.  On the mains side we have the necessary earth and
voltage trips, and the earth trip works well in thunder storms, plunging us
into darkness safely.  But is this device quick enough to protect my
computers ?  We're at the end of a long rural line and so are unlikely to
get voltage surges resulting from load changes.   It seems that a 13amp 4
gang socket with telephone protection as recommended on this list is a
reasonable course of action but can anyone tell me if they are one-shot and
have to be replaced, or are resettable/automatic resetting ?  How reliable
are they in protecting the phone input (broadband etc).  Another course of
action is to spend out and get a power back-up which may contain its own
protection?   Robin




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https://wiki.kubuntu.org/UKTeam/



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