Furman PS-PRO-II Power and Surge Protection Review

Furman PS-PRO-II Power and Surge Protection Feature
- FURMAN PS-PRO II RACK MOUNT 9 OUTLET 20 AMP POWER CONDITIONER/SEQUENCER W/ SMP+
The most widely recognized and trusted name in AC power conditioning is proud to introduce the PS-PRO II power conditioner / sequencer, featuring Furman's revolutionary SMP technology. Furman's Series Multi-Stage Protection (SMP) circuit also features our exclusive Linear Filter Technology (LiFT) coupled with Extreme Voltage Shutdown (EVS) and a high current TVZ-MOVs. Together, these technologies comprise what is, without question, the world's most advanced and comprehensive transient voltage surge suppressor. SMP (Series Multi-Stage Protection Plus)Furmans SMP surge suppression virtually eliminates service calls. Traditional surge suppression circuits sacrifice themselves when exposed to multiple transient voltage spikes, requiring the dismantling of your system, and repair of your surge suppressor. Not so with SMP. With Furmans SMP, damaging transient voltages are safely absorbed, clamped and dissipated - no sacrificed parts, no service calls, no down time. Unique to Furmans SMP is its unparalleled clamping voltage, even when tested beyond the grueling specifications of - USA/CIDAs A-1-1 test. While other designs offer clamping voltages that are well above 300VAC peak (far beyond long accepted professional standards), Furmans SMP clamps at 188VAC peak, 133 VAC RMS even when tested with multiple 6000VAC - 3000 Amp surges! This unprecedented level of protection is only available with Furmans SMP technology. LiFT (Linear Filtering Technology)Unfortunately, traditional AC filter/conditioners have been designed for unrealistic laboratory conditions. Prior technologies could actually harm audio and video performance more than they help, due to the resonant peaking of their antiquated, non-linear designs. Under certain conditions, these designs can actually add more than 10 dB of noise to the incoming AC line! Worse still, lost digital data, the need to reboot digital presets, or destroyed digital converters are frequently caused by excessive voltage spikes and AC
No comments:
Post a Comment