How to Get Ting
-
wrote on 9 Oct 2024, 14:18 last edited by
I got mine Free! from State Farm.
I plugged it in yesterday.
Make your house safe from fire, or at least safer.
I never heard of anything like this until State Farm asked if I wanted one.
-
wrote on 9 Oct 2024, 16:07 last edited by
I might have to reach out to our insurance.
-
wrote on 9 Oct 2024, 17:09 last edited by
I got one from SF a few months ago. So far all it has done is tell me the power flickered off and back on. But now I know that 764 other houses in the area with Tings did too. It's a good idea.
-
wrote on 9 Oct 2024, 18:57 last edited by
Would this be useful in the condo?
-
wrote on 9 Oct 2024, 18:58 last edited by
It detects whether your power is surging, arcing, shorting, all of which can cause fires. So yes, it would be.
-
wrote on 9 Oct 2024, 19:25 last edited by George K 10 Sept 2024, 19:25
My State Farm agent is downstairs. Perhaps I'll stop by later this week and have a chat.
He can advise me as to whether this Ting will be of any value.
-
wrote on 9 Oct 2024, 20:43 last edited by
https://www.nytimes.com/wirecutter/reviews/ting-electrical-fire-protection-device/
https://restechtoday.com/ting-from-whisker-labs-helps-prevent-home-electrical-fires/
And Ting ended up being useful in Houston during Beryl:
And if you feel like taking a deep dive into how it works:
We've had ours for several months and it has detected no issues. We live in a 60+ year old house that has had its share of electrical work done by people other than electricians, so we figured what the heck, it's free for three years. A couple of electricians I know think it's a good idea. Won't catch every problem, but it's way better than nothing.
So far, so what. And that's a good thing.
-
wrote on 10 Oct 2024, 00:38 last edited by
Does it automatically cut electricity if the "surge" reaches a certain volume or is it just a warning system?