So...many of these surge suppressors require a connection to a ground. Some of the Total Protection Solutions (phone/LAN/sat) require the ground wire to be no longer than twelve inches. Some of theirs say they have to be within four feet of the service entrance, which I can't do.
What does a protector do? Does it filter, absorb, or stop surges? Not after you read the numbers. Will that 2 cm part stop what three kilometers of sky could not? Will its few hundred joules absorb surges that are hundreds of thousands of joules? Of course not. How to quickly identify a protector whose numbers claim near zero protection. It has no dedicated wire for that short connection to earth.
No earth ground means no effective surge protection. No way around that reality. Your protection must be installed where all electric lines meet the earth ground (ATS). Do you also need earth ground rods installed within feet of that box - to upgrade to meet and exceed earthing requirements? The effective protector makes a short (ie 'less than 10 foot') connection to earth.
What does a protector do? From the NIST (a US government research agency):
> You cannot really suppress a surge altogether, nor "arrest" it. What these
> protective devices do is neither suppress nor arrest a surge, but simply
> divert it to ground, where it can do no harm.
What does a protector without that short connection to earth do? Gives a surge more paths to find earth destructively via adjacent appliances. Yes, it is a surge protector. It does put the surge on all other wires. It is not an effective surge protector with no short path to earth ground. So the surge now has more wires to find earth destructively via appliances.
Protection is about the energy. Either a surge is harmlessly absorbed in earth - does not enter the building. Or that surge is inside hunting for earth destructively via appliances - with or without plug-in protectors. Your choice. Spend less money per protected appliance using one 'whole house' protector. Or spend tens or 100 times more money for protectors that do not even claim protection in their numeric specs. Some will even cite subjective claims from the sales brochure - ignore the spec numbers that say near zero protection and near zero filtering. Those are the overwhelming majority who recommend ineffective protectors.
The NIST then describes those plug-in protectors and UPS bluntly:
> A very important point to keep in mind is that your surge protector will work by diverting
> the surges to ground. The best surge protection in the world can be useless if
> grounding is not done properly.
A protector without that short connection to earth does what? No wonder they hype it with a big price and no numeric protection claims. They are not selling surge protection. They are selling a very profitable myth. The best surge protector in the world is useless with proper earthing - that always required low impedance (ie 'less than 10 foot') connection to single point earth ground.
Your telephone should already have a 'whole house' protector installed for free. Why? Because the superior solution costs so much less money and is so effective. But again, what makes the telco protector effective? It also must make that 'less than 10 foot' connection to the same (single point) earth ground.
Cable TV needs no protector do have protection. Cable must be hardwired short to the same earth ground before entering the building.
What provides the protection? Not a protector. Cable does not even need a protector. Earth ground provides surge protection. A protector is, well, Dr Kenneth Schneider:
>Conceptually, lightning protection devices are switches to ground. Once a threatening
> surge is detected, a lightning protection device grounds the incoming signal
> connection point of the equipment being protected. Thus, redirecting the threatening
> surge on a path-of-least resistance (impedance) to ground where it is absorbed.
>Any lightning protection device must be composed of two "subsystems," a switch
> which is essentially some type of switching circuitry and a good ground
> connection-to allow dissipation of the surge energy. The switch, of course, dominates
> the design and the cost. Yet, the need for a good ground connection can not be
> emphasized enough. Computer equipment has been damaged by lightning, not
> because of the absence of a protection device, but because inadequate attention
> was paid to grounding the device properly.
But again, an overwhelming majority don't know this - and yet recommend a UPS anyway. Earth only one 'whole house' protector to have massive protection. The UPS is only for power to protect unsaved data.