> > I'm looking at several brands of rackmount 3kva double-conversion
> > UPSes, such as Tripp Lite and Eaton Powerware. I'm specifically
> > looking for something that will work as a line-interactive UPS until
> > the power starts to misbehave and will then switch to
> > double-conversion mode until a while after the last power bump.

Not entirely the topic asked, but we have good experience doing this at the 500 
kva module level. We are using the 'eBoost' method from GE, which is more or 
less what you ask for. It keeps the inverter and rectifier alive and energized, 
but current flow is via the bypass static switch. 

We have used this for about a year or so now, and even including hurricane 
sandy craziness, have seen in excess of 98% usage of eBoost. When in that mode, 
system efficiency jumps from about 92% to 99.8% efficient. A huge savings per 
500 kva / 450 kw. 

450 kw * 24h * 30d * 7.8% increase in efficiency is 25,272 kw-hrs saved per 
month, or at $0.12/kw-hr is $3,032/month/450 kw of load. 

The point is that it works, works well, and is green. 

http://www.gedigitalenergy.com/products/brochures/PowerQuality/brochure-eBoost-GEA-D1050-GB.pdf

To this point:

> even if it can switch - you are still taking that risk of power issues that 
> will
> jump your ups and hit your connected equipment anyways.

If the overall power system is designed correctly, this should never be an 
issue. We did pretty extensive testing on this.

I don't know if anyone does this at the very-small level. I know GE's smallest 
unit is 300 kva for eBoost.


"Question everything, assume nothing, discuss all, and resolve quickly."

-- Alex Rubenstein, AR97, K2AHR, a...@nac.net, latency, Al Reuben --
--    Net Access Corporation, 800-NET-ME-36, http://www.nac.net   --


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