[ale] OT need 600-1000W power protection for 3 minutes - cheap
Ron Frazier (ALE)
atllinuxenthinfo at techstarship.com
Tue Jul 9 16:13:31 EDT 2013
PS, these ups's only have about 300 joules of surge protection. I've
never understood why. I would recommend putting a good media room surge
protector first in line, with a 2000 - 3000 joule surge protection
rating, then the ups.
Ron
On 7/9/2013 3:46 PM, Ron Frazier (ALE) wrote:
> Hi Alex,
>
> Thanks for the BR/BX explanation link. It looks like the BR series
> are better units.
>
> Would you like to acquire another Smart UPS? Mine is an SMT-750 (750
> VA / 500 W) less than 1 year old. It works great and, as far as I
> know, the batteries are in good shape. However, the more advanced
> features are beyond my needs and I do need the additional capacity of
> a BR1500G. The current amazon price is $ 272 for this unit. I'll let
> mine go for $ 200, which is a 25% discount. I'll even deliver it
> within 30 miles of my house (from Cumming, GA, exit 16 on GA 400).
>
> I probably shouldn't tell you this since I just asked you to buy this
> unit. But, according to http://www.apcupsd.com/ , this unit will only
> communicate basic data to apcupsd, and will not communicate voltage,
> frequency, etc.
>
> I was under the impression that computer power supplies were
> essentially (or appear to be) resistive loads. As an example, my pc
> is currently running at a .98 power factor, almost as many watts as
> VA. In any case, it psychologically bothers me to have to look at a
> box for an SMT-750, for example, and mentally convert and think, no,
> that won't power my 530W load. Oh well.
>
> By the way, for those of you who would like to track the storms in the
> area in case you're worried about power glitches too, I've found a
> couple of good ways to do that. I'm sure there are others.
>
> Go here and get the Reload Every Firefox plugin and install it (if you
> use Firefox): http://reloadevery.mozdev.org/ Or, you can use the
> addons menu in Firefox. There are many plugins with similar names
> though.
>
> This will allow you to automatically refresh a web page on a schedule.
>
> Now, go here to the AccuWeather radar page:
> http://www.accuweather.com/en/us/georgia/weather-radar
>
> If you wish, you may use this page as is. However, I find it
> convenient to search on my city. This puts an image of a thumb tack
> at my location. If you want to do that, first type your city, state
> into the search box and hit enter. Ex: Cumming, GA. Click the radar
> tab on the right. This goes to an animated page, which is not what I
> want for my purposes. Scroll down and click Classic Radar on the left
> bottom.
>
> You should now have a static image of the south east radar with a
> thumb tack at your location.
>
> Now, right click the tab you're viewing this in, select the reload
> every menu, and select an update interval of say 5 min. The page will
> then refresh every 5 minutes. You can confirm that the reload every
> is active by going back into the menu. You should find 5 min selected
> and the "enable" box selected. I don't think that it updates when the
> screen saver is on, so the first time you come back after a while, you
> may have to refresh the page manually.
>
> The problem with this page is that it shows 6 states at once and our
> area is tiny. So, as a final step, hit the ctrl + (control and the
> plus key) sequence 8 times to zoom the page in. You could also use
> the mouse to go to the view menu, zoom, zoom in. Now, visually adjust
> the borders of the Firefox window to about 4" x 3" in size (or
> whatever you want). Adjust the scroll bars to show the area of the
> state that you want.
>
> This is harder to type than to do. Ta-Da, you now have an auto
> updating customized radar picture for your area. There may be other
> radar sites where this works better, but this works for me. If you
> know of others, please share. One problem is that some sites will
> lose the scaling and position when the page is refreshed. Other web
> pages may show the roads and cities, etc.
>
> For Android, I highly recommend Storm Eye:
> https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.cds.stormeye&hl=en
>
> It overlays the weather radar on a google map with cities and roads.
> It shows the track of the storms and eta to your designated location.
> And, it auto updates.
>
> Hope this is helpful.
>
> Sincerely,
>
> Ron
>
>
> On 7/9/2013 12:45 PM, Alex Carver wrote:
>> I have three APC SmartUPS and have no problem whatsoever with apcupsd
>> finding them. I get emails when the system goes on battery and the
>> auto shutdown works fine across multiple machines with apcupsd
>> sending data to other machines hanging off the same UPS running
>> apcupsd in ethernet mode (no direct data connection to the UPS.)
>>
>> Here's your BR/BX explanation: http://forums.apc.com/message/23515
>> The difference between the SMT and the BR/BX is the Smart Slot where
>> you can add Smart Slot accessories like various management cards
>> (ethernet) with temperature sensors, etc. Both the SMT and BR/BX
>> have the normal USB/serial data port for connecting to a single
>> computer. The Smart Slot just allows for direct ethernet connection
>> and management by SNMP and APC's PowerChute software.
>>
>> Measuring in VA instead of W isn't marketing rubbish (entirely), it's
>> proper engineering specification for AC circuits. Unless your
>> voltage and current are exactly in phase at all times with no
>> distortions at all, Watts are meaningless unless you also specify VAr
>> or the power factor. Volt-Amps eliminates the need for the power
>> factor because it represents the scalar length of the power phasor
>> (vector) regardless of where it's pointing in W/VAr space (the 2pi
>> radian range of phase angle.)
>>
>> Using volt-amps for the specification means that a power supply (the
>> UPS in this case) can supply varying types of loads with different
>> power factors and the total available apparent power (real and
>> reactive/imaginary) is constant. A 100 VA motor and a 100 VA light
>> bulb require the same amount of apparent power. The light bulb needs
>> mostly real power and the motor needs mostly reactive power.
>>
>> Where the marketing comes in is the fact that the engineers are
>> forced (by marketing drones) to pick an average power factor so they
>> can label the object. Typical switching supplies (prior to a
>> concerted push against manufacturers by power companies to make them
>> electrically cleaner) have a power factor of 0.6-0.8 and some really
>> crappy Chinese knock-offs have power factors down near 0.4 with
>> hideous harmonics. APC assumes a power factor of somewhere around
>> 0.65 for connected devices which is why your Watt rating is lower
>> because some of the available VA must be used for the VAr portion of
>> the load demand.
>>
>> On 7/9/2013 08:45, Ron Frazier (ALE) wrote:
>>
>>
>>> Hi all,
>>>
>>> To be honest, I need to save some money for this project, since, when
>>> spending $ 200 at a time, and multiple times, it adds up. But, I hope
>>> to implement it soon. I might be able to buy one new unit, and reduce
>>> the load on one pc to use my old ups with that. Not sure yet.
>>>
>>> The more I think about my loads, the more I think I need a 1500 VA / ~
>>> 900W unit. A 1200VA/~700W unit might do it, but most product lines
>>> seem
>>> to jump to 1500 VA after 1000 VA.
>>>
>>> The last time I bought a UPS, it was from Frys. I have no complaints,
>>> but you do pay sales tax and probably an intrinsically higher price.
>>> The
>>> advantage is easier returns if needed. I can't believe it, but I am
>>> actually considering mail ordering a UPS. I understand from Amazon
>>> reviews on some, that you have to pay to ship it back to the factory if
>>> there is a problem, which can be expensive.
>>>
>>> Based on prior discussions and my experience, I know APC is a good
>>> brand. I also understand that, for the "smart" units, it can be
>>> hard to
>>> get linux to talk to it, if you want to use the auto shutdown software
>>> like apcupsd. I think you guys told me before that Tripplite is good,
>>> so I may look at those. Based on some amazon reviews and prior
>>> comments
>>> here, it sounds like I should stay away from Cyberpower.
>>>
>>> I think it's total marketing rubbish that they rate these things by VA
>>> primarily. My computer is currently pulling 539 VA and 532 W,
>>> according
>>> to the Kill-A-Watt EZ, with a power factor of .98. The UPS I have
>>> is an
>>> SMT-750 so you would think it could handle the load. But NO, that's
>>> 750
>>> VA. The watts are limited to 500, so the thing yells like crazy if I
>>> run this load on it. (So I don't.) So, it should be labeled SMT-500!
>>> That unit was capable of handling the load before I upped the load.
>>> Yes,
>>> I do know what VA means. It's just difficult to remember to cut
>>> whatever number I see on the box almost in half to get a realistic
>>> load.
>>>
>>> Charles, thanks for the links. I'll keep the buy batteries local idea
>>> in mind. Might not be necessary with Amazon's free shipping.
>>>
>>> It's nice to see that the major makers are starting to come out with
>>> some bigger units, with some smarts, with more reasonable price tags.
>>>
>>> That Fry's link you posted is actually quite interesting. I found it's
>>> bigger brother on Amazon.
>>>
>>> http://www.amazon.com/APC-BR1500G-BACK-UPS-10-Outlet-1500VA/dp/B003Y24DEU/ref=sr_1_1?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1373381258&sr=1-1&keywords=br1500g
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> APC's different model numbers are confusing. For example, I don't know
>>> the difference between a BR and a BX unit.
>>>
>>> This unit is a 1500 VA / 865 W unit, with lcd (or led or something)
>>> status display, and AVR (automatic voltage regulation [very cool]); for
>>> $ 179 with free shipping and no sales tax. This unit has a BR part
>>> number.
>>>
>>> This is at a price point / capacity point that's really starting to get
>>> my attention.
>>>
>>> Here's a similar unit at Frys.
>>>
>>> http://www.frys.com/product/5955004?site=sr:SEARCH:MAIN_RSLT_PG
>>>
>>> It has a BX part number. Go figure. The capacity is the same, but
>>> it's
>>> $ 210, or $ 225 after sales tax.
>>>
>>> In any case, much better than the $ 500 Frys wants for the SMT-1500.
>>> So,
>>> I guess the big question is, what do I give up by going with the BR/BG
>>> 1500 and saving $ 300 versus the SMT-1500? I'll have to do some
>>> research on that.
>>>
>>> Alex, good point about the cooling. If I'm using a stock battery and a
>>> name brand, it will probably be ok. If I'm using a non standard
>>> battery, that may be something I have to look at.
>>>
>>
>>
>>
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>
--
(PS - If you email me and don't get a quick response, you might want to
call on the phone. I get about 300 emails per day from alternate energy
mailing lists and such. I don't always see new email messages very quickly.)
Ron Frazier
770-205-9422 (O) Leave a message.
linuxdude AT techstarship.com
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