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Grounding an AC power plug is not earthing. Impedance in
wire dictates that a connection from incoming utility wire to earth ground must be short, direct, and independent. Short as in 'less than 10 feet'. Wall receptacle is typically many times too far away. Making matters worse, that safety ground wire (ie romex wire) is bundled with other wires and has too many splices. Effective shunt mode protection cannot exist at the appliance. Obviously - all but no earth ground connection which is why plug-in protector manufacturers avoid this entire subject. Protection that can be effective is already inside the appliance. That series mode and galvanic isolation inside appliances is not overwhelmed when a 'whole house' shunt mode protector is properly earthed. Appliances already contain effective 'point of use' protection that is effective IF a destructive transient is earthed at the service entrance. Inernal protection circuits that don't require earthing at the appliance AND assume earthing will be performed at the service entrance. No 'whole house' protector means appliance internal protection may be overwhelmed. Again, that wall receptacle has all but no earth ground - due to excessive wire impedance and other electrical factors. So plug-in protector manufacturer simply avoids the entire technical discussion. They don't even claim to provide protection from a typically destructive transient. Greg wrote: Appliances already have effective 'point of use' protection. How effective can that protection be if there is no grounding conductor in the plug? |
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