[aprssig] UPS
John Gleichweit
smokeybehr at sbcglobal.net
Wed Dec 27 18:54:38 EST 2006
I have a couple of small UPSs in use around the house. The 400va unit
that I have powering the headend for the network (dsl modem and
wireless router) uses a single 12V x 7AH battery, similar to the one
that is the battery back-up for the burglar alarm in the house.
The other one is a 1400VA unit and uses a pair of 12V x 14AH batteries
in series for 24V into the inverter. That's used to power a server
that's online 24/7.
On Wed, 27 Dec 2006 15:26:16 +1030, Ben Lindner <vk5jfk at activ8.net.au>
wrote:
>The UPS that I checked out and posted the original message about had
>only 1 12volt/7Ah sealed lead acid in it and was 600va UPS
>
>Ben Lindner
>VK5JFK
>
>Michael Hatzakis, Jr MD wrote:
>> Tapio,
>>
>> <<<It depends. Many, I'd even say most of, today's small and affordable
>> UPSes (well under 1 kVA) use a single 12 volt sealed lead battery.>>>
>>
>> Thank you, I did not know this, all the larger UPS units I have ever seen
>> use from 24-96 volts DC. Good info...!
>>
>> Michael K3mH
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: aprssig-bounces at lists.tapr.org [mailto:aprssig-bounces at lists.tapr.org]
>> On Behalf Of Tapio Sokura
>> Sent: Tuesday, December 26, 2006 5:37 PM
>> To: TAPR APRS Mailing List
>> Subject: Re: [aprssig] UPS
>>
>> Michael Hatzakis, Jr MD wrote:
>>
>>> I'll try to be helpful here... First, most UPS's do not run on 12v, they
>>>
>> run
>>
>>> on 48v for the older and larger units and the newer one's use a lower
>>> voltage, but still much higher than 12v required for TNC's and radios, so
>>> you simply cannot use a UPS to keep batteries charged to run a TNC/Radio
>>>
>> if
>>
>>> this is what you were thinking...
>>>
>>
>> It depends. Many, I'd even say most of, today's small and affordable
>> UPSes (well under 1 kVA) use a single 12 volt sealed lead battery.
>> Higher VA versions use several batteries connected in series, for
>> example I have one under my desk that eats five (60 volts) and another
>> at work that has eight (96 volts). The bigger you go in kVA, the higher
>> the voltage, generally.
>>
>> I agree that directly plugging into a UPS's battery for 12 volts for
>> radios, TNCs, and such isn't necessarily a good idea. Use the UPS for
>> those devices that need "house current" and use a power supply with a
>> battery for 12V. Some just use a big sealed lead battery and a smart
>> battery charger permanently connected together. If you want to spend
>> some money, the pwrgate works fine as well.
>>
>> If you absolutely have no use for uninterruptible AC, then by all means
>> use it to power the DC equipment. But keep in mind that many small
>> off-line UPSes aren't designed to continuously run on/charge batteries.
>> So if you continuously "steal" 12 volts from the battery, you might fry
>> something up, especially on a higher load. On-line UPSes always convert
>> all power going through them to DC, so they should handle continuous DC
>> loads better.
>>
>> Tapio
>>
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>>
>
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--
John "Smokey Behr" Gleichweit FF1/EMT, CCNA, MCSE
IPN-CAL023 N6FOG UP Fresno Sub MP183.5 ECV1852
List Owner x6, Moderator x4 CA-OES 51-507
http://smokeybehr.blogspot.com
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