Path: utzoo!utgpu!water!watmath!clyde!att!rutgers!rochester!cornell!batcomputer!gould!steinmetz!uunet!portal!cup.portal.com! From: thad@cup.portal.com (Thad Thad Floryan) Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga Subject: Re: ups/sps - which & what kind Message-ID: <10063@cup.portal.com> Date: 16 Oct 88 05:55:10 GMT References: <4799@louie.udel.EDU> Organization: The Portal System (TM) Lines: 100 Re: the question about UPS (Uninterruptible Power Supply) or SPS (Standby Power Supply) for the Amiga, I'll describe what I'm using for all my Amiga and AT&T 3B1 UNIXpc systems: a backup power system. Considering the average of one major power glitch a month in this area (the hills overlooking Silicon Valley), I consider power protection essential; I don't mind entering a megabyte-sized program once, but twice is painful. Just this past Thursday I had a line go down for 67 minutes. Eerie feeling basking in the soft glow of the Amiga monitor while I'm happily coding away under candlelight at 3AM. :-) My lab system comprises an Amiga A1000, with a Ronin Hurricane 68020/68881 card and 4MB 32-bit-wide RAM, along with a 2MB ComSpec AX2000, a Supra 4x4 SCSI host adapter feeding 10 disk drives (two Maxtor XT-3380, one Maxtor XT-3280, one Maxtor XT-2190 with Adaptec 4000A, a Seagate ST-157N, a Fujitsu M2451A 190MB tape drive, and assorted other drives connected to various Adaptec 4000A and 4070 SCSI:ST506/412 translators), an Escort 2 2MB RAM card, an ARK 24K MNP modem, an Amiga A1070 monitor, and two external A1010 floppies. Yes, all that equipment continued to operate during the power outage. And, in fact, the equipment is still up continuously 24 hours/day; haven't even powered down to install AmigaDOS Enhancer 1.3 which arrived at dealers this past week. I'm not attempting to brag about the system; I consider that equipment essential for my work. The point is, the UPS systems I'm using provide power to sustain the Amigas and the flanking 3B1 systems. My requirements were straightforward: sine wave power, no service loss, and reliability. Fortunately, what I found was also (relatively) inexpensive. What I'm using are the Safe Model 500 Backup Power Systems. These are American made by: Safe Power Systems, Inc. 528 West 21st Street Tempe, Arizona 85282 602/894-6864, 800/325-5848 I purchased mine from the son-in-law of a long-time buddy of mine from the Electronic Defense Labs whose company is: Powersafe 108 E. Fremont Avenue #243 Sunnyvale, California 84087-3201 408/773-1220 The pertinent specifications of the Safe Model 500 are: Output power rating Continuous 500 Watts Surge 1000 Watts Output current rating 4.4 Amps continuous Output voltage: 115VAC +/- 3.0% Output frequency: 60 Hz +/- 1.0% Output waveform: sinewave, less than 5% THD @ full power Switchover: synchronized to AC power, both ON and OFF, less than 1 millisecond These units ALSO provide COMPLETE transient suppression, and over- and under- voltage protection. I can now turn on inductive motors, flourescent lamps, vacuum cleaners, ultra- sonic welders, etc. with impunity and NO perturbation of the computers or their disk drives or modems. Safe Power also manufactures larger capacity units, some of which even have special signal cables with which to alert one's UNIX systems to the standby power condition (and initiate a graceful shutdown after some time period). I wouldn't even consider operating without such a unit (esp. a UNIX system). Shop carefully for whatever system you eventually choose; some of the products on the market are junk, providing square wave output and very poor regulation and inadequate and unsynchronized switchover. The list price of the Safe Power Model 500 was around $750 several years ago. Figure you need one UPS for each computer. With UPS power systems, you DO get what you pay for. Be leery of the $200 units. A simple test to perform is to see how long a 100W lamp will endure using the inexpensive units. Note that I said ``ENDURE''. The cheap units will BURN OUT your equipment (due to square waves, frequency variation, etc.) Hope this provides a starting point for your UPS/SPS quest! I also have a 2KW generator backing up everything else. This comes in handy during the prolonged outages (longest was 6 days when a winter storm carried one of my 100' eucalyptus trees 30 feet, taking the power and phone lines with it). Thad Floryan [ thad@cup.portal.com (OR) ..!sun!portal!cup.portal.com!thad ]