Xref: utzoo sci.electronics:13023 sci.physics:13695 comp.sys.sgi:4973 Path: utzoo!utgpu!watserv1!watmath!att!rutgers!bellcore-2!thumper!karn From: karn@thumper..bellcore.com (Phil R. Karn) Newsgroups: sci.electronics,sci.physics,comp.sys.sgi Subject: Re: UPS (Uninterruptable Power Supplies)... kinda long. Message-ID: <1990Jul22.171116.2062@bellcore-2.bellcore.com> Date: 22 Jul 90 17:11:16 GMT References: <1990Jul21.195257.9277@cunixf.cc.columbia.edu> Sender: usenet@bellcore-2.bellcore.com (Poster of News) Reply-To: karn@thumper.bellcore.com (Phil R. Karn) Organization: Bell Communications Research, Inc Lines: 30 The reason there are at least three different UPS/SPS configurations shows that there is no one ideal approach. The SPS (standby inverter plus relay) has the advantage of low cost and efficient operation, but at the expense of a switchover transient when the power fails. The SPS-plus- ferroresonant transformer (the BEST Technology approach) has the advantage of covering the switchover transient and of providing something that looks more like a sine wave, but at the expense of weight, accoustic noise and inefficiency. The true online UPS has the advantage of an output that never wavers across an outage, but at greater expense (since the inverter must be rated to run continuously) and lower efficiency (because in normal operation, power is being double-converted). In general, the switching power supplies used in most computers can handle the switchover transients of a SPS just fine. Linear power supplies, however, can have problems because their low voltage filter caps can't store nearly as much energy as the high voltage caps found in most off-line switching supplies. This problem bit me in our Internet gateway; we have a Cisco CGS router plus a separate T-1 CSU, both powered by an Inmac 400VA SPS (OEM'ed from American Power Conversion). Although the Cisco would ride just fine across the switchover transient, the CSU occasionally glitched and hung, and it had to be power cycled to get it going again. My solution was to install a ferroresonant transformer between the SPS and the CSU. So, in general, SPS's are just fine for most computer equipment. And if you have more sensitive loads (modems, etc), add a small ferroresonant transformer to protect them. Phil