On Sun, 09 Oct 2005, Alvin Oga wrote: > > > the answer is all ups will work if you have the magic wand ( skills ) > > > > This is incomplete. You also need magic powder (time and other resources), > > which are often not of trivial cost. So this answer is at best useless. > > like all things ... > - some folks can do it in 5 min ... some takes 5 hrs
Don't give me that. I *know* how to do it, and the correct answer is: "for some units it takes 5 minutes because they are just silly things that you just need to folow the traces with a multimeter to find out their function". But for a more complex microcontroller-based unit, it can take several days (and I don't mean just a couple of them) to reverse engineer the full smart-signaling protocol. The magic powder can be *very* expensive, even if you already are a wizard with a good magic wand. > - knowing which screws to turn will costs $100/hr as the saying > goes (the home car mechanic vs certified(nutcases) at the dealers) I am a certified(nutcase) when it comes to UPSes by your definition, I suppose. I am an electrical engineer (fully certified) after all... > > His claim is right, batteries will last at most three years (do not expect > > to get one that will last that much with any consumer or prosumer grade > > UPS). UPS units can, and often last up to ten years (but not consumer grade > > ones). > > some of my el cheapo consumer stuff is still working after 8hrs ... I will suppose you meant 8 years, not 8 hours. > - been tested about a month ago with an unexpected 5minute power > outage Lucky you. You have good batteries on that one, write down their model and manufacturer to get more of the same kind later. > - if the machines is shutdown by the ups, > - who/what is gonna go turn it back on later .. If you have a decent UPS, *it* will turn the machine back on later, after main power returns and it has charged the batteries enough. > - how do you know its safe to come back online Because you got a proper UPS and programmed it to not turn the load on before its batteries are at least 30% full, I suppose. Sure, we are assuming the UPS is not breaking down and doing dangerous silly things. I have never dealt with one who would screw up on this, though, even the cheap ones would not turn the load on line power while it was out of range. > - did the machine have enough time to shutdown properly or did > it die cause it waited too long Depeds on whether people are doing stupid things on the shutdown scripts, etc. Test it, any proper UPS monitor package can be ordered to simulate a low battery powerdown to test the software end of things. Do make sure to test it with the network down as well. > > An UPS can easily destroy the load in certan failure modes, and it does not > > those are the socalled "bad ups" It could be a good UPS breaking down, as well... but this should indeed be rare. > some ups claim to be able to protect your equipment against lightening > strikes ... > - the folks in the mid-west and mid-atlantic gets to test > their PCs and ups on a regular basis Against indirect lightning-induced surges? Sure. Against *direct* ones? I doubt it very much so, unless we are talking about US$500+ UPSes (and probably even then...). Proper lightning protection for small stuff costs at least US$100, and it requires a very good ground to actually work (which must be far away from the lightning arrest array's grounding or it won't work). So, this is not something you should expect to find even on prosumer models. > > but it CAN provide enough surge suppresion to > > protect the load and its control channel from surges induced by the > > lightning > > EM-field in the internal wiring. > > for surge protection ... a good $10 surge protector works just as good $10 surge protectors, *IF of very good procedence*, will get the induced or residual surges that get past *proper* lightning surge protection. These small surges your UPS should already be capable of handling. And your PSU should too, if it is not crap. I would NEVER recommend anyone to buy a US$ 10 surge protector and believe they are even remotely safe from lightning damage because of that US$10 gadget... If you have no real lightning protection (e.g. you live in a house), and want it, you need a valid configuration made of stuff like this: http://www.citelprotection.com/citel/AC_EL.htm Note: it *will* cost a lot more than US$ 10, try US$ 150 or so, maybe more. And you need very good grounding too, which is expensive as well and requires maintenance. > and for good high end ups .. powerware/lieberts are better Agreed. The big Powerware units are the best you can get for datacenter- grade UPS around here, AFAIK. And the capacitive coupling for redundant units is very nice, not to mention the fact that they have proper battery control (I don't buy into their marketing that they are the only ones to do so, though :-P ). You *do* pay for the quality though. I had a quote of about US$ 25k for a 60kVA unit about an year ago (here in Brazil). > in 90% of the cases, i'd avoid the $200 - $1500 ups market > if it's my pesonal nickel to spend > - for $1000 ... i can have 2-3 identical complete systems > ( $80 mb, $80 cpu, $40 disks, ... to protect data ) <shrug> That wouldn't work for me. If you need it online while you're out, you'd have all three units fried in an year without an UPS, PLUS you'd get downtime and constant crashes which are certainly annoying even if you don't lose any data permanently. -- "One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them. One disk to bring them all and in the darkness grind them. In the Land of Redmond where the shadows lie." -- The Silicon Valley Tarot Henrique Holschuh -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]