Looper's Delight Archive Top (Search)
Date Index
Thread Index
Author Index
Looper's Delight Home
Mailing List Info

[Date Prev][Date Next]   [Thread Prev][Thread Next]   [Date Index][Thread Index][Author Index]

RE: OFF TOPIC: 2-prong outlets



Amen brother, good advice.
Bill

-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Douglas [mailto:TonyIsYourPal@netscape.net]
Sent: Friday, February 17, 2006 7:09 PM
To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com
Subject: RE: OFF TOPIC: 2-prong outlets


Well, sometimes. Read the specs for your prospective UPS very carefully.
"Consumer grade" units (ie. cheap ones that are generally used with PCs /
comparatively low draw equipment) can vary wildly in exactly what you're
getting, with not much upfront warning. "The Big Print Giveth, the Small
Print Taketh Away" can apply in spades to cheaper UPSs. Some don't do any
power conditioning at all and simply swap to batteries when the power goes
out, while some will run you through the rectifier at all times. The first
option often comes with an exciting subsecond glitch while the unit
recognises there is no power and switches to battery (short, but long 
enough
to take gear down). The other route may provide protection against peaks,
but not against brownouts, or it may provide both. Read carefully and spend
wisely. Not that I've ever seen anyone caught out by buying a cheap(ish) 
UPS
and not getting the protection they thought they  were getting ...

As an aside, what are US domestic outlets rated for ? In the UK, I think an
outlet is generally  rated for 3 kilowatts, so you can run a fairly
extensive set of gear off a single socket so long as you don't do anything
too daft, like endless daisy chains of four-bars ...

- Tony

Sean Echevarria <sean.loop@creepingfog.com> wrote:

>Yeah - there was an article in a recent EM - I don't remember what the
>article was about but I do remember the recommendation that a UPS is 
>better
>than something like a standard power condition.  The argument was that the
>power is cleaned up by virtue of always running off the batteries.  In
>other words, when you use a UPS, you don't get power direct from the grid 
>-
>you get the power after it's been stored in the battery so you get a
>constant voltage, etc.  Any truth to that?
>
>
>At 2006.02.17 02:50 PM, William Walker wrote:
>>face in place.  But I would also suggest you invest in a power /line
>>conditioner, with as much filtering and RF protection as your budget will
>>allow...I know, just the thing you want to hear after paying first, last,
>>and a deposit:( Monster seems to make some good ones, as does furman, but
a
>>dedicated electronic or computer store will have more affordable ones 
>with
>>battery back up, so you have a minute or two to power down before the
power
>>goes off, during a black out. Other products that will help would be a
good
>
>

__________________________________________________________________
Switch to Netscape Internet Service.
As low as $9.95 a month -- Sign up today at 
http://isp.netscape.com/register

Netscape. Just the Net You Need.

New! Netscape Toolbar for Internet Explorer
Search from anywhere on the Web and block those annoying pop-ups.
Download now at http://channels.netscape.com/ns/search/install.jsp