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This is a difficult question. Depending on how well the lightning or the
severity of the power surge was, will determine if the damage is visible or
not. A general failure can also look the same depending on how the device
failed.
You really have to take more care to evaluate of the customer is being
truthful or not. If you look at the weather reports for the day, and you
have a client come in with something that is not working, it is very easy to
correlate the events. As for a power serge or brownout, maybe the
electrical company may have logs to this effect. But, then again, under
many circumstances they may have not known themselves if there was a rapid
serge.
I had a modem and TV that was damaged by lightning. There were no visible
means to determine this. The TV, I was able to service, but the modem had
to be scrapped.
Today, we are supposed to be experiencing a geomagnetic storm from the sun.
We are in Canada, and are told that in our geographic location we may be
most susceptible from this. There are many companies that let their
employees go home early, and they did a complete shutdown in order to not
take any chances. I am still working on, because we cannot afford to close
for the day. We have to give our contracts full service at any time.
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Greetings,
Jerry Greenberg GLG Technologies GLG
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WebPage
http://www.zoom-one.com
Electronics
http://www.zoom-one.com/electron.htm
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Is there anybody out there that can provide me with some advice in this
regard.
We test electronic equipment for the insurance industry of new claimants
that have institute a claim regarding "Lightning damage/ power surge damage"
to computers and computer equipment.
Regards