A bud of mine got one of those new fancy lincoln tig welders @
half the size of a refrigerator . First time he used it took out
his relatively? new large screen tv . He later found there was a
disclaimer in the manual somewhere
animal
On 5/17/24 8:09 AM, davesmith1800
wrote:
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I do not know?
There not that old so most homes would have one.
I have the part you need to replace in electronics.??
It is a real pain when one blows. I have only had happen one time
in my life back in 1980's and RadioShack had part on the shelf.
5 hours later was up running again and a spare one.??
Today I like the power strip with built in protection.? If it
dieds then grab on off shelf and 5 minutes later up and running
again.?
FYI? If do a lot welding it can also happen to your electronics.?
Dave?
On Thu, May 16, 2024 at 09:49 PM, mike allen wrote:
Are those whole house units still only one use ?
animal
On 5/16/24 9:41 PM, Chris Albertson
wrote:
The
¡°best¡±? ?The latest electric code (here in the US, the NEC)
has taken all the fun out of this. ?All new service entrance
panels are required to have ¡°Whole House¡± surge protection.
?This only applies to newly installed panels in new
construction or retrofit. ?But if you are going to worry about
protecting stuff, you might as well just do it once
?
These devices are easy to install into an old panel and
because they are required, they are available ¡°everywhere¡±.
? ?Just put one of these in and be done with it and it will
cover your TV, computer, power tools, car charger, and
whatever.
?
There are two basic kinds, one snaps in like a larger
size 220 volt circuit breaker and the other screws into a
knockout.
?
OK, but you really wanted a AC-DC-AC system. ?You might
be in luck because that is how all brushless motors work. ?
There is one of those inside the lathe already if you have a
brushless motor
?
But if I am not mistaken, I think all mini lathes use PWM
to control the motor. ?If so, then you already have a kind
of AC-DC-AC system in from of the lathe's motor.
?
?
On May 16, 2024, at 8:19?PM, Johannes via groups.io
<johannes@...>
wrote:
What
is the best AC protector/stabilator for a 7x14
lathe?
There
are many types: one for your computer, one for your
fridge.
Full
AC-DC-AC is maybe a littlebit luxury?
?
/johannes
?
?
?
On Thu, May 16, 2024 at 09:49 PM, mike allen wrote:
Are those whole house units still only one use ?
animal
On 5/16/24 9:41 PM, Chris Albertson
wrote:
The
¡°best¡±? ?The latest electric code (here in the US, the NEC)
has taken all the fun out of this. ?All new service entrance
panels are required to have ¡°Whole House¡± surge protection.
?This only applies to newly installed panels in new
construction or retrofit. ?But if you are going to worry about
protecting stuff, you might as well just do it once
?
These devices are easy to install into an old panel and
because they are required, they are available ¡°everywhere¡±.
? ?Just put one of these in and be done with it and it will
cover your TV, computer, power tools, car charger, and
whatever.
?
There are two basic kinds, one snaps in like a larger
size 220 volt circuit breaker and the other screws into a
knockout.
?
OK, but you really wanted a AC-DC-AC system. ?You might
be in luck because that is how all brushless motors work. ?
There is one of those inside the lathe already if you have a
brushless motor
?
But if I am not mistaken, I think all mini lathes use PWM
to control the motor. ?If so, then you already have a kind
of AC-DC-AC system in from of the lathe's motor.
?
?
On May 16, 2024, at 8:19?PM, Johannes via groups.io
<johannes@...>
wrote:
What
is the best AC protector/stabilator for a 7x14
lathe?
There
are many types: one for your computer, one for your
fridge.
Full
AC-DC-AC is maybe a littlebit luxury?
?
/johannes
?
?