this post was submitted on 16 Nov 2023
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I used to have a APC UPS, it worked fine for quite a few years but suddenly stopped working. I heard good things about Eaton, and bought one, but it has been a disaster to be honest. I use it on a fileserver, and the capacity should be good, but when i tried the new one from Eaton it cut power during startup, and restarted the machine several times, maybe some peak power thing, but the APC what 650VA, and the new one is 850VA and the APC worked fine. For some reason it caused some data loss, which is certainly a big drawback when preventing data loss is the main reason for having it in the first place. I had a power failure, and the Eaton seems to have handled shutting down the machine, but after the failure it trips the circuit when it is plugged in. Does anyone have some other UPS to recommend? As of know the UPSes has caused more power outages than just not having one.

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[–] Chaoslord2000@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

The size of your power supply matters. My server only draws 200w under load yet has a 1400w power supply. My 700va, 450w UPS would trip on start up as the inrush for the server was too large. I upgraded to a 1500va, 1150w UPS and it's been fine ever since. Both UPSs were Eaton 5SLCD models.

[–] flac_rules@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I am sure it does, but it is a bit weird that the old APC handled it fine (and to be honest, should the ups trip when the inrush current is to large when connected to power??

[–] Chaoslord2000@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

First part:. Different UPSs have different behavior. Some are more sensitive to disturbances, whether caused by line or load.

Second part, the UPS being connected to utility has no effect on the inrush to the server. It all depends on where in the AC sine wave the energy starts flowing. Ever plug something into an extension cord with a clear receptacle? Sometimes there is a sizable blue arc, sometimes small, sometimes none. All about where in the cycle the connection is made.