sberry
Banned
Is the stereo a 2 wire appliance or is it 3 wire?
Who put you in charge?Not sure where u get your info and why u only comment on threads that pertain to grounding, surges and lightning. Seems u wait around for just these types of threads.
Golly. People keep jumping on that post; I wasn't trying to give him a electronics dissertation, I was trying to give him an extremely non-technical explanation for why it is acceptable to add grounding electrodes.
In any case, while it was admittedly-- and again, intentionally--a very non-technical post, I don't understand how the statement you bolded is really wrong?
Who put you in charge?

It is a two wire appliance.
I don't want of offend anyone and I appreciate all the replies but just for now I
have one question. Do I need to add ground rods at the sub panel? Some of this information is over my pay grade. LOL
I don't want to sound like a smart a$$ but I am talking about the 8 or 10 foot rods that you drive in the ground and put a clamp on and run a wire to the box.
Its because youre not forking or splitting the ground.
As i said above, fault current doesnt flow over grounding electrodes.
None of this is complicated. But some is completely unknown to many including electricians.Do I need to add ground rods at the sub panel?
As coralnut noted, every wire in every cable must make that low impedance (ie no sharp bends) connection. This post only introduced what you must know to inspect or to have protection.
I have one question. Do I need to add ground rods at the sub panel? Some of this information is over my pay grade. LOL
But every sharp bend diminishes transistor safety - increases impedance - makes the best protector less effective.
None of this is complicated. But some is completely unknown to many including electricians.
With a four wire connection from main building to secondary building, then no ground rods are needed. But that is only for human safety. Code only discusses human safety issues (ie resistsnce). Transistor safety means you must meet or exceed code requirements (ie low impedance). For example, if those buildings are more than 20 feet apart, then a secondary building needs its own single point earth ground. This was discussed in Post 34. Since most of that layman information is new, then it requires multiple rereads.
That is an earth ground necessary to make a protector effective. Then a 'whole house' protector must be in that secondary building's panel located to make a low impedance (ie less than 10 foot) connection to (newly installed) single point earth ground.
How those 8 foot ground rods are hardwired to a subpanel is critical. Not to electricians since code for human safety does not care how many sharp bends are in that wire. But every sharp bend diminishes transistor safety - increases impedance - makes the best protector less effective.
Post 24 also includes a critically important fact:
:So with a 4 wire feed to a sub-panel in a detached building does the neutral bar stay "unbounded" to the sub-panel? And I'm assuming the GEC from the ground rod will attach to the grounding bar that is bonded to the sub-panel? Also could somebody point me to the Article and Part No. of the NEC that has the "Grounding electrodes are required on ALL detached structures" information. Not doubting, would simply like to update my 1966 code book.

An assumption based only in observation. And by not first learning how surges do damage. A surge is often incoming on utility wires not required to have surge protection. Cable or antenna is required to have earthed protection. Meaning that is not an incoming surge path. But is a common outgoing path.Every broken Onkyo I've ever seen has a bad digital board, surge comes in through the HDMI and blows up the board.
Read its spec numbers. It will only absorb 480 joules and never more than 960 joules. How does that block or absorb surges that do damage; that can be tens or hundreds of thousands of joules? It doesn't. It only claims to protect from another type of surge that typically does no damage.This may be excessive, but I run all my computer equipment through a Tripp Lite LCR2400 ...
Numbers were for a 1440 joule protector.westom - This is obviously not my area of expertise so I will yield to better informed posters, however I'm not seeing the specs you're showing.
First, voltage can drop so low that incandescent bulbs dim to 40% intensity. Even that voltage is good for any properly designed computer.I assume it cleans up the power from the frequent brown outs and power outages that leave me running on generator power.
An assumption based only in observation. And by not first learning how surges do damage. A surge is often incoming on utility wires not required to have surge protection. Cable or antenna is required to have earthed protection. Meaning that is not an incoming surge path. But is a common outgoing path.
A direct strike even far down the street is incoming on AC mains. Once that surge is incoming to all household appliances, then it goes hunting for earth. A common outgoing path to earth is out the HDMI port to earth via the TV cable, satellite dish, or antenna.
HDMI ports are often damaged when it is the outgoing surge path. If both an incoming and outgoing path do not exist, then no damage. Damaged often because a homeowner failed to properly earth a 'whole house' protector on AC mains. HDMI ports often damaged because a homeowner has all but invited a surge inside to go hunting, destructively.
An HDMI protector does not claim to protect from that type of surge. Only earthing (low impedance by a direct hardwire or protector) protects from that type of surge.
If a surge is incoming on HDMI port, then the wire/cable that carried that surge into a building is defectively installled. Fix the problem; do not cure symptoms.
First, quoted was enough to identify what was referenced. No reason to waste bandwidth quoting everything. Every relevant part was answered with reasons why.Don't quote part of my post and ignore the rest.
Protect by doing what? What voltage causes damage? An international design standard for electronics (long before PCs existed) has this expression in all capital letters in the low voltage region of a chart: No Damage Region. Low voltage does not cause electronics damage. Voltage can drop so low that incandescent bulbs can dim to 50% intensity. A voltage that low is normal voltage for all electronics - due to its power supply.Wouldnt an uninteruptable power supply protect the line voltage to the stereo?
Protect by doing what? What voltage causes damage? An international design standard for electronics (long before PCs existed) has this expression in all capital letters in the low voltage region of a chart: No Damage Region. Low voltage does not cause electronics damage. Voltage can drop so low that incandescent bulbs can dim to 50% intensity. A voltage that low is normal voltage for all electronics - due to its power supply.
If voltage drops lower, electronics simply power off. Again, where is damage?
If voltage goes excessively higher, well, incandescent bulbs can increase intensity by 50%. Even a voltage that high is made irrelevant by what its power supply must do.
How often are your bulbs dimming or brightening that much?
A destructive voltage occurs maybe once every seven years due to a massive surge current. A typical example is a lightning strike. Read a UPS' specifications. How many joules does it claim to absorb? Destructive currents are typically carrying hundreds of thousands of joules. How many joules does a UPS claim to absorb? Hundreds? Hundreds is a near zero surge typically made irrelevant by what a power supply must withstand without damage.
A typically destructive surge is incoming to everything. If your stereo needs protection, then everything needs protection. Only proven solution is a properly earthed 'whole house' protector. For about $1 per protected appliance. Then hundreds of thousands of joules harmlessly dissipate outside. Another anomaly best solved by something better and less expensive. Another anomaly that a UPS does not even claim to protect from.
So again, protect from what? Protect by doing what? UPS provides temporary and 'dirty' power during a blackout. What else does it claim to do? A question that begs for an answer from that UPS' numeric specifications.
what in that wikipedia article was being referenced? A typical consumer UPS connects a stereo directly to AC mains when not in battery backup. Then power is 'cleanest'. Making AC power from a DC battery is typically 'dirtiest' power.I agree with DC73 , and the power going to the stereo would be isolated as I thought and not "temporary and dirty"
Power loss is not a destructive transient. When a destructive transient occurs, every UPS is typically connecting AC power directly to its load (ie stereo).Online/double-conversion[edit]
When power loss occurs, the rectifier simply drops out of the circuit and the batteries keep the power steady and unchanged. When power is restored, the rectifier resumes carrying most of the load and begins charging the batteries, ... The main advantage of an on-line UPS is its ability to provide an "electrical firewall" between the incoming utility power and sensitive electronic equipment.
A blackout is not a surge - despite what was only assumed. That UPS did what it was suppose to do - maintain power when utility had a problem. That is not a surge.UPSs alerted there was a problem with the utility power and dropped the incoming feed.
Nothing got fried....
Posting vauge anomalies without numbers is a first indication of a kid who is pretending to be an IT professional.Calling someone electrically naive when u have no information about their background is very disrespectful.
When some cannot understand technology, then some see attitude and tone. It only exists inside one who has failed to comprehend.
I understand technology and particularly this technology better than most. Your technical descriptions are over the head of most who post on this site. You have failed to provide technical documentation I can review to back up your claims (which might very well be valid) and have proven that you are NOT here to help.
I would encourage others to disregard your participation until you decide to actually help others and to not be here for the purpose of demonstrating your education or for ridiculing others.
DC
So which numbers do you need documentation for? Most of what was posted in based in basic EE concepts.You have failed to provide technical documentation I can review to back up your claims (which might very well be valid) and have proven that you are NOT here to help.
. . . which concept escapes you?
That question was answered with associated reasons and the numbers why. Apparently your technical knowledge is insufficient. An answer so confused you that your eyes glazed over. Again, if you really wanted a useful answer, then post that question again so that the answer can be explained in a simpler manner. But that means disposing of a nasty and emotional attitude.My original question was in a previous post in this thread.