Thanks Joe, but not needed, I was interested to see that a device, with a UL marking, that cost $2 retail, could actually be made to survive the pulses that have killed some of the meters you tested. I guess that the meters are less dangerous though, in that they are not an item that is nearly always plugged in to the power line and expected to survive all the hash coming down.
Thank you for at least entertaining the idea though, and for doing the test. I was interested in seeing that the transformer insulation was capable of handling the pulses without breakdown, which seems to be the most common failure of these chargers, demonstrated by the few examples of people being electrocuted by them during use of the attached phone during charging.
I would say the meters are potentially MUCH more dangerous than a USB charger than plugs into a wall outlet. First, we are talking about a CAT II environment versus who knows what. You can pretty much be sure the charger is never going to be attached to a 480 bus. Transients in CAT II may have much lower voltage, energy than CAT III. Most people don't hold the wall chargers in their hand while they are using them. Wall chargers don't have leads attached to them. The education needed to use a charger safely versus a multimeter is much less. How many people do you see post, I hooked my meter to the output of a MOT... Have you ever seen someone post the same thing for a charger? List goes on...
For the insulation breakdown what HKJ is doing with the insulation tester looking between primary and secondary would be more appropriate than a surge test anyway.
And again, to be clear, my generator's energy levels are much less than what you could potentially see on an AC line, even in a CAT II enviroment. You can't compare the two, although I am sure there are people out there who feel you can. It gets back to that was never a goal. If I wanted to run real line transient tests, I would have a combo generator sitting here with a blast containment setup. This is the same reason I can't look at your power strips or any other AC device like this. You think people cry foul about the testing I do now, imagine if they saw all these perfectly good meters coming apart at the seams!
I know there is a lot of confusion surrounding the meter testing I do. I've shown open circuit waveforms, light bulbs, charging capacitors to the same energy levels and discharging them to a metal plate. Maybe this test will help a few more people understand about what is going on or it will just add to the confusion.
Can I interest you in a slightly used AC USB charger?