UPS & 3B1 Anecdote
Boyd Ostroff
ostroff at Oswego.EDU
Tue Apr 10 08:55:16 AEST 1990
In article <4623 at daffy.cs.wisc.edu> horn at rt5.cs.wisc.edu (Mark Horn) writes:
>In article <4491 at cbnewsj.ATT.COM> gnome at cbnewsj.ATT.COM (ronald.l.fletcher) writes:
>I think Boyd Ostroff said that his power supply was 386 Watts (?). Well, then
>if the UNIXPC draws .86 Amps, what does this translate into for a reasonable
>UPS? Say I want one that will last XX minutes, how do I translate .86 Amps into
>XX minutes? I assume that the rating on the power supply has everything to do
>with it.
Actually it's 325 watts. The duration that you get has nothing to do with the
wattage rating, though. The wattage (or volt-amps) just tells you how
big a load you can plug into it without blowing the inverter. It would be
wasteful to buy a unit with a higher wattage rating than you need; actually
you're interested in battery capacity (amp-hours). Find out the amp-hour
rating of the battery and divide it by the current draw of your equipment.
Tripp-Lite makes another series which come without batteries and you supply
your own (or buy one of theirs). If you need capacity, you might check these
out - get your own cheap car (or boat) battery and hide it under your desk.
I bought mine mainly on price.
I circled all the appropriate items on one of those magazine "reader service
cards" before I bought my UPS and got tons of catalogs and spec sheets back in
the mail (including a newsletter from some company that I still receive
showing monster installations at radio stations, etc :-). These spec sheets
will tell you everything you want to know (and more) about battery capacity,
transfer time, waveform, etc.
||| Boyd Ostroff - Tech Director - Dept of Theatre - SUNY Oswego
||| Sys Admin - "The CallBoard" - (315) 947-6414 - 1200/2400 baud
||| ostroff at oswego.oswego.edu - cboard!ostroff at oswego.oswego.edu
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