24G's questions thread
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24giovanni
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24G's questions thread
Those of you who have circuit breakers in your house, do you have a surge protector on your breaker box?
thx
thx
I don't have a "whole house surge protector",24giovanni wrote:Those of you who have circuit breakers in your house, do you have a surge protector on your breaker box?
thx
but for what it's worth,I protect my home theater with one of these surge protector power conditioners http://www.apc.com/resource/include/tec ... se_sku=H15
I also have smaller sp's on each of my 2 pc's and 2nd tv system.
The reason most cheap surge protectors don't work is because they are not effectively grounded. Even "whole house" surge protectors and UPSs can mishandle surges if not correctly grounded. Effective grounding means the surge protector must be grounded to an earthed copper rod and it must be no further than about 6 feet away from the rod.
The switches used by Ma Bell that have been in use for the last 75 years have cheap surge protectors and worked all the time, over and over again becasue they were effectively grounded. Same with their moden digital switches.
The switches used by Ma Bell that have been in use for the last 75 years have cheap surge protectors and worked all the time, over and over again becasue they were effectively grounded. Same with their moden digital switches.
No one has any right to force data on you
and command you to believe it or else.
If it is not true for you, it isn't true.
LRH
and command you to believe it or else.
If it is not true for you, it isn't true.
LRH
- Mad_Haggis
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there is not much that would help a direct hit of lightning,The_Informer wrote:Is it really necessary to have your whole house "surged" and protected in that manner? It won't fend off a direct hit of lightning.
the surge protection is more to protect sensitive electronics from surges of power when the power comes back on after a storm outage,etc,etc
or wide fluctuations or spikes in voltage from whatever.
remember DC stays pretty much the same,AC is always changing.
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24giovanni
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Sava, I had directv install my HDTV receiver today and I am only getting a resolution of 720 x 480 @ 60Hz. If I am right about this that is standard reception and not digital. Am I correct on that. I am using HD channels as well as standard and the resolution is the same on both. My samsung tv is capable of 1080P so shouldnt i be getting a resolution of 1920 x 1080?
it should be 1080i,24giovanni wrote:Sava, I had directv install my HDTV receiver today and I am only getting a resolution of 720 x 480 @ 60Hz. If I am right about this that is standard reception and not digital. Am I correct on that. I am using HD channels as well as standard and the resolution is the same on both.
it sounds to me like a settings issue somewhere.(TV or sat box?)I have never had satellite so I don't know what settings are available.
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24giovanni
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yeah a setting in the box most likely, look online for the model you have for what you need to change. If your on a HD channel and still in standard viewing with a HD TV then it may be just that program at that time not recorded/processed in 1080CableDude wrote:It's very likely on your box.
I'm not really familiar with DirecTV stuff so kinda guessing... check over on the Satguys forum, search around.
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24giovanni
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CableDude wrote:On my HD dvr box, I had to change a setting to 1080i or something. Not near the box right now.
I don't have satellite, but I would suspect the boxes are some what similar.
You are correct CD. That is what I had to do, you think the installer would of told me that. Beautiful pic now.
thx
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24giovanni
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Cables are prob weather rated so they are fine. They will hold up to high heat and rain so don't worry about them. I put them on a roof and run long cable runs over shingles all the time.24giovanni wrote:Sava, Is it ok / safe to have the cable (2) to run from one side to the other running over my shingles? This is how he set up my new dish. Or should he have run them through my attic instead?
thx
Ya gotta watch what you use.. most installers use screw tacks and that adds "holes" in your roof so its almost better to just let the cable drape off the roof. I try to run wires straight down to avoid stuff getting caught up on it too.Dan wrote:probably want to make sure they are secured somehow though,IMO
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24giovanni
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