I don't usually comment very much any more, but I have used Many of the Tripp-Lite type units and they are actually MUCH better than a battery back-up for filtering. (They are really known as "Line Conditioners" and are used in many forms in almost every CNC machine made.
It is VERY rare for one of these units to fail, however, I have seen their filtering level drop due to the Caps used decreasing in value over the years. I have 5 operating in my house right now and would never even think about running ANY modern electronic equipment without one. I actually have been using them for more than 25 years and I thank them for the fact of never having any device fail that was attached. My average life for an old TV was 10 years and then I only replaced the set for new features.
TO get back to the reason I am commenting. The main filtering on these units is USUALLY on the output side, NOT the input side. With the 5 different units I have now, of which 2 are Tripp-Lite and one of those is an LC-1800, I have never lost any signal from plugging them into the wall. Of course, no X-10 units will run on the output of one of these. If the unit you have is sucking out the x-10 signals, then one of the X-10 filters should clear it up but you must take into account how these work. If you were to have a low voltage input and were drawing the full output, the darn thing WILL draw a LOT more amperage to keep the output voltage constant. I have run an air conditioner on a long extension cord with the 1800 unit at the end of the cord just before the AC and it works great, but can draw 15-18 amps on my current meter (Basic clamp-on) for a 12 amp AC load. I never measured the start-up surge, but I'm sure that doesn't apply here anyway. Just be sure to add around 25% to the current value you expect to draw, and be sure the filter you get is rated for that.
I wouldn't recommend ever getting rid of those Tripp-Lite units, unless they die, and I have never yet seen one give out. OF course the best units ever are the old "SOLA" units, but they consume too much power for any homeowner to even think of using one. Imagine proper voltage regulation with NO electronics. Those units used core saturation to limit the output to the desired level and dissipated the rest as heat.
Hope I haven't bored too many with the rehashing of history, but these "Conditioners" have always been my favorite things for power line clear-up, and for a real history trivia, the resonant ones could keep cycling for long enough for old mainframes to have time for an emergency power down if main power was lost. Try that today...