Product Description
Satic Pure Power Plug-in Dirty Electricity Filters
What Makes Satic Pure Power Plug-in Filters
Different from Other Plug-in Filters?
Why buy Satic plug-in dirty electricity filters when other brands are cheaper? Well, Satic’s Pure Power plug-in filters
- filter out a much wider range of frequencies than other filters
- filter dirty electricity from the hot and the neutral wire
- don’t create leading current
- do not put a large magnetic field on the wiring.
And you don’t have to buy 10 or 20 of them to filter your home! Two to four Pure Power plug-ins are all you typically need to filter a small to medium-sized home. Please contact me to determine exactly what you need.
How to Use Satic Plug-in Filters
Satic Pure Power plug-in filters (also known as the “EMF Eliminators”) can be used to filter an entire home, to filter a room, or to clean up dirty electricity from a particular device or appliance. This article on installing Satic plug-in filters will help you understand how they can be used.
To filter an entire home or apartment, you must clean up dirty electricity on both phases of electricity. U.S. and other countries with 120-volt electricity have two phases; countries with 240-volt have between one and three. If you want to clean up all the dirty electricity in your home, you must filter allphases. See this article on installing Satic plug-in filters for an illustration of how this works.
To clean up dirty electricity from a device or appliance, you need only one plug-in filter. If multiple devices are on a single circuit, you need only one filter for that circuit, not one filter per device. Please contact me with questions, and also take a look at this article on installing Satic plug-in filters.
See the chart farther below for a comparison of the Pure Power versus other plug-in filters.
My Experience with Plug-in Filters
My first experience with filtering dirty electricity was with the commonly sold plug-in filter known as the Stetzer or Stetzerizer. Those filters made me sick as a dog! At the time, I had just started the Smart Meter Education Network, an activist group fighting against smart meters and for an analog meter opt-out. Analog meters don’t create dirty electricity; smart and digital meters do.
After my experience with the Stetzer filter, I doubled down on my efforts to get analog meter choice in Michigan. After all, it was clear (so I thought) that filtering would not work for me.
Fortunately, the Satic filters do not have the problems that Stetzer, Greenwave, and other cheap filters do. See the chart below to compare the specs of the SaticShield plug-in filter with the Stetzerizer and Greenwave filters.
Comparison of Satic, Stetzer, and Greenwave Plug-ins
Satic Pure Power | Stetzer Plug-ins | Greenwave Plug-ins | |
Filtering range | 4 KHz – 100,000 kHz
(4 kHz – 100 MHz) MHz) |
4 KHz – 150 KHz
(4 kHz – 0.15 MHz) |
1 KHz – 30,000 kHz
(1 kHz – 30 MHz) |
Filters out Dirty Electricity on Hot Wire | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Filters out Dirty Electricity on Neutral Wire on Circuits | Yes | No—shunts DE to neutral | No—shunts DE to neutral |
Number of Filters and/or Rectifiers and/or MOVs | Over 5 filters
(proprietary info as to total number)
|
One filter | 3 filters |
Number of Filters Needed for 1000 sq ft Home | 2–4 | At least 10 | At least 10 |
Warranty
|
3 years (same technology as the whole-house filter, but rather than 10-yr warranty, warranty is 3 yrs just because people can be hard on stuff they can pull out and toss around. They will last just as long as whole-house)
|
1 year | apparently 60 days |
Outlet on Filter | Yes | No | Yes |
Magnetic Field on Wiring and Emanating into Rooms | None to extremely minimal | Yes—to the point that it is debilitating for many | Yes—to the point that it is debilitating for many |
Magnetic field | Slight when inches away from filter; see video on whole-house filter | Moderate at every place filter plugged in | Moderate at every place filter plugged in |
Self-Healing Rectifiers | Yes | No | No |
Capacitors that short-circuit electrical field and can create magnetic field | No | Yes | Yes |
Grounded | Yes | No | Yes |
Work with Solar | Yes. Advisable to purchase Solar Power Perfect filter if you plan to use solar. | Not well | Not well |
Works Well with Power Line Communication (PLC) Metering | Yes | No | No |
Creates Leading Current | No | Yes, which can and does cause some expensive equipment to fail | No data, but given that technology is essentially same as Stetzer, very likely |
Causes problems with charging devices | No | Sometimes | Sometimes |
Stops chargers from overheating | Yes | ? | ? |
Causes chargers to overheat | No | Sometimes | Sometimes |
Can cause equipment to operate with less heat (which is a good thing) | Yes | No | No |
Certifications | UL (Underwriters Laboratory), RoHS | UL | UL, RoHS |
Here is what the Greenwave website says about the Greenwave plug-ins: “Greenwave filters deploy capacitance technology to “short out” dirty electricity traveling along the wiring in buildings. Some battery-charging devices are not designed to work with high capacitance technologies. Therefore, battery chargers, back-up power supplies, and electric devices that include built-in chargers (such as electric toothbrushes and razors) should not be plugged into the same wall outlets or power strips as Greenwave® filters. Similarly, these items should not be plugged directly into Greenwave® filters that include an outlet at their base. In addition, Greenwave® filters are not always compatible with solar energy systems and the storage back-up units they use.”
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Satic’s Pure Power Plug-in Dirty Electricity Filter is also known as the EMF Eliminator or the ES120 or ES240.
Dirty electricity (DE) is also called line noise, power quality issues, voltage transients and harmonics, microsurge pollution, and electromagnetic interference (EMI).
Dirty electricity filters are also known as line conditioners.
This filter is made by Satic, also known as SaticShield. Sometimes people mistakenly add a “t” to the company name and call it the “Static dirty electricity filter” or the “StaticShield.”
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Countries Using 120-volt Power
Always check with your electric company if you are unsure what kind of power you have. This list is not guaranteed to be 100% accurate, as there can be variations house to house and utility to utility.
North America
- United States
- Canada
- Mexico
Africa
- Algeria (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Cameroon (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Liberia
- Libya (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Morocco (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Senegal
- Togo (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Tunisia (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
Asia and Middle East
- Bahrain (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Indonesia (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Japan
- Korea, Republic of (South Korea) (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Lebanon (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Philippines (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Saudi Arabia (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Taiwan (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Vietnam (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
Australia and Oceania
- All are 240-volt.
Central America and Caribbean
- Bahamas
- Barbados
- Belize
- Bermuda
- Costa Rica
- Cuba
- Curacao
- Dominican Republic (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- El Salvador (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Guatemala (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Haiti (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Honduras (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Netherlands Antilles
- Netherland Antilles, Dutch side of Sint Maarten
- Nicaragua
- Panama
- Puerto Rico
- Trinidad & Tobago
- Virgin Islands
Europe
- All are 240-volt.
South America
- Bolivia
- Brazil (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Colombia (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Ecuador (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Guyana (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
- Suriname
- Venezuela (check with your electric company–your power may be 115/120-volt, or it might be 220/230/240-volt)
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