Followup to: UPS initiated autoshutdown
Fred Rump from home
fr at icdi10.UUCP
Sun Jul 9 07:23:07 AEST 1989
In article <216 at tnl.UUCP> norstar at tnl.UUCP (Daniel Ray) writes:
[deleted stuff]
>1. A TrippLite 450 Watt battery backup power supply (model BC-450), costing
>$299 thru Advanced Computer Products (714-558-8813). This same unit cost
[deleted stuff]
>provides 10-30 min of protection, has an audible alarm, a circuit breaker
>to protect against overloads, voltage regulation, square wave AC during
>battery power (some say this is not as good as pure sine waves, others say
Test your up time and see how long you really stay up.
Personally, I wish you the best of luck but we've long ago given up on
inexpensive units like the TrippLite. When you sell UPS systems to customers
it's like selling an insurance policy. And when they don't perform - boy are
you up shits creek. We found that we need minimum of 450 watts and sine wave
units. The square ones just don't seem to kick in in time all the time. Then
what have you got? Nothing but a big battery that clucks at you.
We've come to expect to pay about a dollar a watt and then can expect good
service. We have every one of over 100 Xenix/Unix systems on a UPS and
wouldn't begin to accept any kind of service or warranty without it. We
learned these lessaons the hard way out in the field. Electronics seems to run
forever if you protect it from the vagaries of the outside electrical world.
>2. We are about to get Showdown unattended shutdown software/sensor from
>Continental Information Systems, 320 W. Irving Park Rd, Itasca, IL 60143
>(312-250-8111). This provides a device that plugs in and connects with
>a serial port for XENIX, 3B2, or System V/386 UNIX, and the daemon
>software which is configurable. TNL can't vouch for this one since we
>haven't done it yet. The cost is $195 right now.
With this extra expense you could have gotten one of the units that would
have given you automatic protection. American Power comes to mind. There are
several others but we really don't bother with the auto-shutdown units. When
the power problems occur during the day, folks can normally shut down when
they see the lights have gone off. This saves precious databases. During the
night... so what? The systems will autoreboot anyway and no harm is done.
fr
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