Quote from jaronimo:
UPS or surge suppressor. One or the other, never both.
Never plug a UPS into a surge suppressor, and never plug a surge suppressor into a UPS. This does not increase your protection, it actually lessens it.
I used to be able to explain why, but that part of my memory was deleted to make space for trading information. You can probably google it or find why on a UPS website if you are interested.
NO. There is a misunderstanding here:
I agree it is not allowed to plug a surge protector into the UPS. This is a correct statement. The reason is that any UPS output is not exactly the same as the power output in the wall socket. The wave is not exactly sinwave.
This can make a surge protector act as a filter and fail cutting your PC out.
Otherwise it is allowed.
Typical surge protector consists of one little coil, a simple capacity and the zener diode or a small element that burns short if the voltage exceeds certain voltage + fuse.
If the surge protector is more complicated (with an autotransformer or ferro-resonant transformer) then it is active and I'd not connect it with the UPS no matter the sequence.
Another correct statement is that most UPSes have such internal circuitry that there is no need to add any surgeprotection. However it doesn't hurt to plug the UPS in a simple surge protector, remembering the power rating of the protector has to exceed the power rating of the UPS.