Thank you for your time, so ups with sine wave isn't the solution ? I would have a very difficult time finding a certified electrician to install said transformer or anything else.. and I have as I've said a wire going to the earthquake beam inside my home.. from grounding prong to a scratched portion of the beam. Yes I'm using a cut extension wire but it is a lot thicker than the wire inside the cable from power brick to the extruding prong so if a lightning strike occurs i will have a lot more serious issues than a broken laptop... Which is why my petite refrigerator isn't always plugged in... Well it is called "ref" around here.. i even looked at the AC unit connect action and the ground prong has no contact with anything.. and yes about 25-30 m away the landlord did drive a copper rod into the soil but he assures me that all earthquake beams are connected to something going 1.5m into the ground... so i followed his advice and did that, no unsightly cables running 25-30 m... Everyone is more or less happy.. so from here my solution is fix what I can within my petite apt.IE a ups with pure sine wave inverter or a DC to ac inverter (with pure sine)for the 2 solar batteries that I've got....I do have SIGNIFICANT EXPERIENCE with developing countries’ power grids.
The worst problem that I have seen is that the neutral wire is usually poorly bonded to ground, and as such it can float several volts above ground even during normal operation. During power transients or lightning it is almost an open circuit causing the common mode transient to rise hundreds of volts above ground. And no, the regular suppressors intended for developed country installations cannot stop it, as they require a low impedance to ground to operate correctly.
Boy, can I tell you horror stories!! Many of these countries have lax or non existent electrical codes, or are seldom enforced.
Somewhere I have a photo of a thin neutral wire simply wrapped around a dirty steel pipe. No clamps of any type.
Additionally, many installations DO NOT have a dedicated safety ground wire. If a type-B receptacle is installed, the ground terminal is attached to the neutral. Since they use any wire color they have lying around, sometimes the ground terminal is bounded to the live wire. Again, I have personally seen it.
Anyway, the solution is, in addition to all that has been suggested, an isolation transformer and a “personal” grounding rod used only for your devices.
