Advice? Surge Protector
ducktape
With it being thunderstorm season, and especially after reading about Rahja's equipment getting electrocuted, I thought it would be a good opportunity to get a new, better surge protector for my computer.
Does anyone have any advice about surge protectors? I know to get one with coax connectors to surge-protect the coax line if you have cable internet, one with phone line connectors to surge-protect those if you have DSL or dial-up, and that's about it. I have no idea how many joules of protection are enough, and whether or not it would make a difference to get a UPS battery system, since those allegedly have the best kind of surge protector within them.
The surge protector I have now is a hand-me-down from a few years ago when I was pretty poor, and it's some brand I've never heard of, and neither the Protected nor the Grounded lights light up anymore, so just about anything would be a good upgrade from this!
Does anyone have any advice about surge protectors? I know to get one with coax connectors to surge-protect the coax line if you have cable internet, one with phone line connectors to surge-protect those if you have DSL or dial-up, and that's about it. I have no idea how many joules of protection are enough, and whether or not it would make a difference to get a UPS battery system, since those allegedly have the best kind of surge protector within them.
The surge protector I have now is a hand-me-down from a few years ago when I was pretty poor, and it's some brand I've never heard of, and neither the Protected nor the Grounded lights light up anymore, so just about anything would be a good upgrade from this!
zamial
Uninteruptable power supply (UPS) that is what you want, not a surge protector. A Ups will save you from surges, brown outs and black outs. The more expensive they are the longer they power your system. Never plug a printer into them. Some even come with a equipment warrenty (the stuff plugged into it) for more than the equipment is worth, in the case of home users, most of the time. Most will even put the computer into hibernation and save files.
Namebrands that seem good are: APC (Best? hope you have deep pokets), tripplite + cyberpower + belkin about the same. I think I would choose belkin over the others, that is me. Belkin do have a "funny" smell for a few days on some models.
anything on this page that fits your needs:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc... =Top+Sellers
I suggest getting 1 locally if possible they are heavy = expensive to ship.
Another thing to consider is the price but if you have an unstable power grid that is the price you pay for keeping your equipment from getting nuked. I am suggesting a UPS for you for this reason: Lightning storm = power surge, normally followed by sudden power loss.
Namebrands that seem good are: APC (Best? hope you have deep pokets), tripplite + cyberpower + belkin about the same. I think I would choose belkin over the others, that is me. Belkin do have a "funny" smell for a few days on some models.
anything on this page that fits your needs:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc... =Top+Sellers
I suggest getting 1 locally if possible they are heavy = expensive to ship.
Another thing to consider is the price but if you have an unstable power grid that is the price you pay for keeping your equipment from getting nuked. I am suggesting a UPS for you for this reason: Lightning storm = power surge, normally followed by sudden power loss.
Riot Narita
As zamial said. I don't put a lot of faith in surge protectors... great if you expect lightning strikes, but little else.
I use an Uninterruptible Power Supply. My domestic power is occasionally noisy, and some PC components are susceptible to damage from poor power supplies eg. memory and hard disks. I had two hard disks fail with 6 months of moving in... and the "bad power" giveaway was two desktop PC's, on seperate wall sockets, simultaneously resetting themselves.
So I bought a UPS, and made sure I put high quality power supply units in my home-built PC's. The first UPS I used was APC. It was OK, but on their consumer models it's impossible to turn off the (loud) audible alarm when it kicks in. Also, when there are dips/noise in your supply, it clicks loudly each time it switches on and off. This is annoying, since it might do this many times in rapid succession if your supply is "wavering". And if the power dips for more than a few seconds at a time, the alarm goes off.
If you leave the UPS and/or your PC switched on overnight... this clicking, and the alarm are EXTREMELY annoying when you're trying to sleep. Actually they're extremely annoying at any time.
I asked APC support if there was a way to disable the audio alarm - and just silently do a controlled PC shutdown if the UPS is activated and runs out of battery. Despite explaining why I would want this, they treated me like a dumb kid: "why would you want to do that, DUH? There's a reason the alarm goes off". They seem to think that people run 24/7 support services for mission-critical systems AT HOME, with their CONSUMER-LEVEL products, and need an alarm so they can come a-running when the UPS is activated. Bah.
I changed to a Belkin UPS instead, which doesn't click loudly when it switches in, and its audible alarm can be disabled. I won't touch an APC unit again.
I use an Uninterruptible Power Supply. My domestic power is occasionally noisy, and some PC components are susceptible to damage from poor power supplies eg. memory and hard disks. I had two hard disks fail with 6 months of moving in... and the "bad power" giveaway was two desktop PC's, on seperate wall sockets, simultaneously resetting themselves.
So I bought a UPS, and made sure I put high quality power supply units in my home-built PC's. The first UPS I used was APC. It was OK, but on their consumer models it's impossible to turn off the (loud) audible alarm when it kicks in. Also, when there are dips/noise in your supply, it clicks loudly each time it switches on and off. This is annoying, since it might do this many times in rapid succession if your supply is "wavering". And if the power dips for more than a few seconds at a time, the alarm goes off.
If you leave the UPS and/or your PC switched on overnight... this clicking, and the alarm are EXTREMELY annoying when you're trying to sleep. Actually they're extremely annoying at any time.
I asked APC support if there was a way to disable the audio alarm - and just silently do a controlled PC shutdown if the UPS is activated and runs out of battery. Despite explaining why I would want this, they treated me like a dumb kid: "why would you want to do that, DUH? There's a reason the alarm goes off". They seem to think that people run 24/7 support services for mission-critical systems AT HOME, with their CONSUMER-LEVEL products, and need an alarm so they can come a-running when the UPS is activated. Bah.
I changed to a Belkin UPS instead, which doesn't click loudly when it switches in, and its audible alarm can be disabled. I won't touch an APC unit again.
the bourne hells
I have a Cyberpower UPS works great when playing through a short powersurge or loss of power for a few seconds. I also have them on my TVs and Router so I can play Guildwars all the time XD.
But one thing I can tell you from experience is that they will not protect agaisnt a lighting strike as they all have a fine print that states they will not. And most the time when eletronics get demaged is because of a direct strike. Trust me not fun, I lost quite a few electronics.
But as for surge protection you best bet would be a UPS. Its just so nice not loosing power also.
And as for that annoying alarm Cyberpower units have a nice little button that can disable the alarm is you so desire.
But one thing I can tell you from experience is that they will not protect agaisnt a lighting strike as they all have a fine print that states they will not. And most the time when eletronics get demaged is because of a direct strike. Trust me not fun, I lost quite a few electronics.
But as for surge protection you best bet would be a UPS. Its just so nice not loosing power also.
And as for that annoying alarm Cyberpower units have a nice little button that can disable the alarm is you so desire.
zamial
I also want to add in here that the idea of a UPS is not to "keep playing" with no power. It is so that you can safely shutdown your equipment.
the bourne hells
Quote:
Originally Posted by zamial
I also want to add in here that the idea of a UPS is not to "keep playing" with no power. It is so that you can safely shutdown your equipment.
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You can also set them to auto shutdown after X seconds/minutes after the power goes of to ensure a safe shutdown.
Quaker
If you are concerned with "safely shutting down your computer" after a power failure, then you may need a UPS. But, a UPS is not a surge protector and doesn't protect your computer from lightning damage. Yes, most UPSs include a surge protector, but you can get surge protection without a UPS. A UPS is basically just a battery back-up so you can close out your apps and shutdown the system after a power failure (and by extension, after the surge.)
How much protection you get from a surge protector depends upon how big it is (how many joules it can handle) and how close to a lightning strike you are.
In practical terms a better-than-average quality surge protector is more than adequate for normal home use. If your house gets directly hit by lightning, there isn't any cost effective home surge protector that's gonna help.
Something like this:
http://www.tigerdirect.ca/applicatio...3934&CatId=232
or
http://www.tigerdirect.ca/applicatio...0684&CatId=232
should do nicely.
Beyond that you'd need something (expensive) wired into the main electrical panel.
Btw, since you say your current surge protectors "protected" and "grounded" lights don't light up anymore - chances are it "took one for the team" already and got fried. (If a surge larger than the SP can handle arrives it can fry the SP)
How much protection you get from a surge protector depends upon how big it is (how many joules it can handle) and how close to a lightning strike you are.
In practical terms a better-than-average quality surge protector is more than adequate for normal home use. If your house gets directly hit by lightning, there isn't any cost effective home surge protector that's gonna help.
Something like this:
http://www.tigerdirect.ca/applicatio...3934&CatId=232
or
http://www.tigerdirect.ca/applicatio...0684&CatId=232
should do nicely.
Beyond that you'd need something (expensive) wired into the main electrical panel.
Btw, since you say your current surge protectors "protected" and "grounded" lights don't light up anymore - chances are it "took one for the team" already and got fried. (If a surge larger than the SP can handle arrives it can fry the SP)
Lord Sojar
Quote:
Originally Posted by Quaker
If you are concerned with "safely shutting down your computer" after a power failure, then you may need a UPS. But, a UPS is not a surge protector and doesn't protect your computer from lightning damage. Yes, most UPSs include a surge protector, but you can get surge protection without a UPS. A UPS is basically just a battery back-up so you can close out your apps and shutdown the system after a power failure (and by extension, after the surge.)
How much protection you get from a surge protector depends upon how big it is (how many joules it can handle) and how close to a lightning strike you are. In practical terms a better-than-average quality surge protector is more than adequate for normal home use. If your house gets directly hit by lightning, there isn't any cost effective home surge protector that's gonna help. |
UPS with built in Surge Protection (which most have now) are the best option.
Alexandra-Sweet
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rahja the Thief
He speaks the truth, as my apartment was just hit recently directly by lightning. Despite the very expensive UPS/Surge Protectors I had, my PC still suffered some damage and I had to replace (in my case repair) some parts.
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And a Surge Suppressor doesn't always protect your computer for 100% during a lightning storm.
Chthon
1. Nothing is going to protect your computer from a direct lightning strike. (Hi Rahja!) Just be thankful that it didn't hit you.
2. Surge protection is more useful for situations with "noisy" power companies (possibly with poorly grounded lines that will carry an indirect lightning strike into your home) or poor wiring in your home or apartment.
3. I'd recommend a UPS with built-in surge protection.
4. I would not recommend one made by APC. I've had one fail completely and one that erratically mis-estimates its charge level by a factor of 10. And their support is not terribly helpful.
5. I have heard that a poor-man's solution to heavy surges is to chain garden-variety surge protectors in serial (that is, plug one surge protector into another). Given my limited knowledge of electrical engineering, that makes some sense to me. Anyone with a little more insight care to comment on this?
2. Surge protection is more useful for situations with "noisy" power companies (possibly with poorly grounded lines that will carry an indirect lightning strike into your home) or poor wiring in your home or apartment.
3. I'd recommend a UPS with built-in surge protection.
4. I would not recommend one made by APC. I've had one fail completely and one that erratically mis-estimates its charge level by a factor of 10. And their support is not terribly helpful.
5. I have heard that a poor-man's solution to heavy surges is to chain garden-variety surge protectors in serial (that is, plug one surge protector into another). Given my limited knowledge of electrical engineering, that makes some sense to me. Anyone with a little more insight care to comment on this?
fusa
Chaining surge protectors are a bad idea, bad fire hazard. As you said in point one, nothing will protect from lightning. It moves at the speed of light so no mechanical parts can stop something that fast. You best bet is to get one with a good warranty and trusted manufacturer. I've been using 2 APC here, not many problems other than their vista drivers are a huge waste of resources (but not needed at all) Biggest reason I use them is for the 1 or 2 second power drops which are enough to shut your computer down.
Dark Kal
Quote:
Originally Posted by fusa
Chaining surge protectors are a bad idea, bad fire hazard.
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Quote:
It moves at the speed of light so no mechanical parts can stop something that fast. |
A lightningrod is the best and cheapest solution to protect your house against lightning.
fusa
Its speed is 93,000,000 mph, about 1/2 speed of light, more than enough to go faster then a surge protector can react. And chaining surge protectors is really stupid idea. They only work if plugged directly into a ground. Most companies void their warranty if they are chained. Lightning rods work sometimes, not anywhere close to being a guaranteed protection.
fusa
might want to read http://www.lightningsafety.com/nlsi_lhm/magic.pdf about those "magical" lightning rods...
Quote:
Charge Transfer Systems and Early Streamer Emission air terminals are modern incarnations of the “magic” wares peddled by Melville’s Lightning Rod Man — ornate devices with no independent evidence that they live up to their fantastic claims, sold by a slick salesman who preys on his customers’ fear of lightning and exploits their limited knowledge of lightning protection. |
Dark Kal
Eum... the speed of light is approximately 670,616,000 miles per hour, so... You also don't seem to know a lot about electricity either.
fusa
Oops mistyped mps as mph, either way its still much faster than surge proectors can react and STILL 1/2 the speed as I stated before. Your magical lighting rod isn't going to protect you any better than an ornament on your house. There isn't anything that can give you your 100% protection against lightning.
zamial
Quote:
Originally Posted by fusa
There isn't anything that can give you your 100% protection against lightning.
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Quaker
Lol. Some of this is getting pretty funny.
@Fusa - the surge protectors are not mechanical devices. They use solid-state devices.
@Fusa again - that story about "magical" lightning arrestors is not about lightning rods. It's about other devices that claim to work as well as lightning rods. Lightning rods do work.
@Fusa again - Not that I'm disputing whether chaining SPs is good or bad, but since each SP has grounded 3-prong connectors, each SP will be connected directly to ground. The quality of the overall ground connection would rely upon how well your main electrical power panel is grounded - which is something often overlooked.
@Zamial - Even unplugging everything won't protect your PC from a direct lightning strike. But it should protect it from any spikes coming in through the power lines.
@Fusa - the surge protectors are not mechanical devices. They use solid-state devices.
@Fusa again - that story about "magical" lightning arrestors is not about lightning rods. It's about other devices that claim to work as well as lightning rods. Lightning rods do work.
@Fusa again - Not that I'm disputing whether chaining SPs is good or bad, but since each SP has grounded 3-prong connectors, each SP will be connected directly to ground. The quality of the overall ground connection would rely upon how well your main electrical power panel is grounded - which is something often overlooked.
@Zamial - Even unplugging everything won't protect your PC from a direct lightning strike. But it should protect it from any spikes coming in through the power lines.
Quaker
And speaking of Surge Protectors - lightning is not the only thing they protect against.
A short story:
I once had a customer phone me and complain that his computer (which I had built for him) was shutting down randomly. I told him to bring it over and I'd have a look at it.
I plugged it in, turned it on and left it running overnight. No shutdown, no reboot. Just in case, of course, I did the usual clean out the dust and making sure all the fans were working and thermal paste was where it should be. I told him I couldn't find anything wrong with and he picked it up and took it back home.
He called me again a few days later. Same story, same routine, same result.
When he called a 3rd time a little light went on in my head. I asked him where the computer was located. Short answer: in a small 'computer' room in basement next to the freezer. The freezer and the computer's "power bar" were plugged into the same outlet. I told him to try to note if the freezer came on (or went off) at the same time as the computer rebooted. I also told him that he should get himself a power bar with a surge protector built in.
He never called back, so......
Edit: well, not never - I did sell him another computer a few years later, but I forgot to ask...
A short story:
I once had a customer phone me and complain that his computer (which I had built for him) was shutting down randomly. I told him to bring it over and I'd have a look at it.
I plugged it in, turned it on and left it running overnight. No shutdown, no reboot. Just in case, of course, I did the usual clean out the dust and making sure all the fans were working and thermal paste was where it should be. I told him I couldn't find anything wrong with and he picked it up and took it back home.
He called me again a few days later. Same story, same routine, same result.
When he called a 3rd time a little light went on in my head. I asked him where the computer was located. Short answer: in a small 'computer' room in basement next to the freezer. The freezer and the computer's "power bar" were plugged into the same outlet. I told him to try to note if the freezer came on (or went off) at the same time as the computer rebooted. I also told him that he should get himself a power bar with a surge protector built in.
He never called back, so......
Edit: well, not never - I did sell him another computer a few years later, but I forgot to ask...
Hannes
Quote:
Originally Posted by zamial
I also want to add in here that the idea of a UPS is not to "keep playing" with no power. It is so that you can safely shutdown your equipment.
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The other reason is for insurance purposes... Even if I have 10,000 UPS / surge protectors connected 2 the pc, chances are that lightning will still fry something... (Murphy's Law - I always have bad luck)
So it's just to cover my own @rse incase something does happen, at which point my household insurance will pay out / replace my 2x pc's. (they are connected to a Mecer 800VA UPS)
I don't even know if it has a built-in surge protector or not lol \_(o_O)_/
Wrath Of Dragons
If you are really concerned, I would say get a monster branded one. Yes they are overpriced, and have this whole useless "clean power" thing going on, but heres something I like about them:
they have no "switch". When power surges, it just destroys the path the electricity comes in at. Theres no need to worry about the switch not being fast enough. Monster protectors come with a lifetime warranty, so just take it to your local Monster seller. Bestbuy i think, as well as radioshack, and they should replace it for free.
they have no "switch". When power surges, it just destroys the path the electricity comes in at. Theres no need to worry about the switch not being fast enough. Monster protectors come with a lifetime warranty, so just take it to your local Monster seller. Bestbuy i think, as well as radioshack, and they should replace it for free.
fusa
Quote:
Originally Posted by Quaker
Lol. Some of this is getting pretty funny.
@Fusa again - that story about "magical" lightning arrestors is not about lightning rods. It's about other devices that claim to work as well as lightning rods. Lightning rods do work. |
Surge protectors don't react faster then 93,000,000 mps. Its has to detect the sudden surge and shut it off, by the time that is done its already passed through the surge protector.
As zenmai said only way to 100% protect yourself unplug it during a lightning storm.
Dark Kal
Quote:
Originally Posted by fusa
Oops mistyped mps as mph, either way its still much faster than surge proectors can react and STILL 1/2 the speed as I stated before.
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Quote:
Your magical lighting rod isn't going to protect you any better than an ornament on your house. |
Charge Transfer Systems and Early Streamer Emission air terminals do not equal lightning rods, they're specific lightning prevention systems. This further proves you know very little about lightning and electricity.
Quote:
emeritus professors, phd's md's....I would rely on those a lot mroe than a lot of bs form some idiot on guru |
fusa
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dark Kal
So now you're saying lightning travels faster than light? Since the speed of light is approximately 186,282 miles per second.
Yeah, I'm sure the laws of physics are wrong and you're right. Charge Transfer Systems and Early Streamer Emission air terminals do not equal lightning rods, they're specific lightning prevention systems. This further proves you know very little about lightning and electricity. I'm pretty sure that falls under flaming but I'll let it slide. |
As I said its 1/2 the speed, I mistyped 93,000,000 mph , which should have been 93,000 mps. I checked wikipedia for the speed which they have listed as 186,282.397 which for someone using screen resolution of 2048x1536 looks a lot like 186,282,397.
Also if you new what you were talking about, which you know absolutely nothing, you would know air terminals are modern day lightning rods. The charged charged transfer systems and air terminals are just as unreliable as lightning rods. Its another way the companies rip off the public, that's why they were cited in US Supreme Court. Maybe you should research some of the bullshit you spew in these forums instead of making yourself into a complete idiot.
But I guess these idiots Dark Kai and Quaker know much more than the independent group of PhD's MD's and Professors who spend there careers researching how to protect from lightning strikes. Try reading http://www.lightningsafety.com it covers air terminals, lightning rods and charged transfer systems. They also have photos for the reading impaired here of buildings which burned from lightning strikes with lightning rods on them.
Dark Kal
I'm just going to drop the arguement before it becomes more out of hand then it already has. On a side-note it's Dark Kal with an "L".
zamial
Please be civil. I know that from time to time it can be hard. But we really look down on this kind of behavior. If you want to light someone up, head over to sardelac trolls and tards there o plenty. We are all trying to help here.
KTHXBYE
On topic. I have worked on a universities help desk. The ameritus profs. are really far out of touch with times. 99% of the time ameritus means retired = old, crazy old. We got calls like: "MY internet is broken here. Is it broken over by you?", "My eudora is broken.", "I can't download the internet anymore" and my personal favy "My computer is really slow" (on a windows 95 machine with maybe 128 mb of ram and a prehistoric proccessor.) I am not saying that report is wrong, I am saying that the ameritus profs, while smart, can be really out of touch.
KTHXBYE
On topic. I have worked on a universities help desk. The ameritus profs. are really far out of touch with times. 99% of the time ameritus means retired = old, crazy old. We got calls like: "MY internet is broken here. Is it broken over by you?", "My eudora is broken.", "I can't download the internet anymore" and my personal favy "My computer is really slow" (on a windows 95 machine with maybe 128 mb of ram and a prehistoric proccessor.) I am not saying that report is wrong, I am saying that the ameritus profs, while smart, can be really out of touch.
ducktape
Well, I already bought one, since it was a long time that went by without anyone replying and there were thunderstorms every damn day following my original post. I got a Philips one since it had phone jacks to protect my DSL line, and because it was the only one at the store that had a warranty covering surge, brownout, and lightning strike.
However, since you guys pointed out how good it is to have a UPS if you have a bad electrical system where you live, I'm going to buy one of those too. My building probably has the most terribad electrical system ever. Thanks for the tip about APC stuff clicking loudly and beeping incessantly when it's mad, I would have bought theirs otherwise since all our mega-UPS devices at work are from them and seem to work well.
For anyone who wants to lol at how bad my electrical system is, the idiot maintenance guys (they don't use any certified electricians) have outlets wired in a way that a 2-plug outlet will only have one plug working - no, the other plug in the outlet is not dependant on being enabled by a light switch, it just doesn't work. There are also certain outlets that have working plugs, but for some reason can power anything except for my vacuum. Every year, all summer long, the power gets f***ed up a few times a month, where everyone in my building will suddenly lose power to all the outlets on the left side of their living room, back wall of the kitchen, and right side of every other room (all the other outlets in the apartments will work though) and this will happen several times throughout the day and then magically fix itself in the middle of the night. Every summer they do "maintenance" on the "main power line" to the building to "correct occasional electrical problems", but the power still epic fails just as badly afterwards.
So...yeah. Gonna get a UPS to protect my computer from maintenance's electrical cooties.
However, since you guys pointed out how good it is to have a UPS if you have a bad electrical system where you live, I'm going to buy one of those too. My building probably has the most terribad electrical system ever. Thanks for the tip about APC stuff clicking loudly and beeping incessantly when it's mad, I would have bought theirs otherwise since all our mega-UPS devices at work are from them and seem to work well.
For anyone who wants to lol at how bad my electrical system is, the idiot maintenance guys (they don't use any certified electricians) have outlets wired in a way that a 2-plug outlet will only have one plug working - no, the other plug in the outlet is not dependant on being enabled by a light switch, it just doesn't work. There are also certain outlets that have working plugs, but for some reason can power anything except for my vacuum. Every year, all summer long, the power gets f***ed up a few times a month, where everyone in my building will suddenly lose power to all the outlets on the left side of their living room, back wall of the kitchen, and right side of every other room (all the other outlets in the apartments will work though) and this will happen several times throughout the day and then magically fix itself in the middle of the night. Every summer they do "maintenance" on the "main power line" to the building to "correct occasional electrical problems", but the power still epic fails just as badly afterwards.
So...yeah. Gonna get a UPS to protect my computer from maintenance's electrical cooties.
Quaker
Quote:
Originally Posted by ducktape
For anyone who wants to lol at how bad my electrical system is, the idiot maintenance guys (they don't use any certified electricians) have outlets wired in a way that a 2-plug outlet will only have one plug working - no, the other plug in the outlet is not dependant on being enabled by a light switch, it just doesn't work. There are also certain outlets that have working plugs, but for some reason can power anything except for my vacuum. Every year, all summer long, the power gets f***ed up a few times a month, where everyone in my building will suddenly lose power to all the outlets on the left side of their living room, back wall of the kitchen, and right side of every other room (all the other outlets in the apartments will work though) and this will happen several times throughout the day and then magically fix itself in the middle of the night. Every summer they do "maintenance" on the "main power line" to the building to "correct occasional electrical problems", but the power still epic fails just as badly afterwards.
|
Some outlets have a metal connector(s) between the two sockets that can be snapped off in case you want to wire them to separate circuits. My guess on the outlet where only one circuit works is that they used an outlet where one of the connectors got snapped off. It should be just a simple matter of replacing the outlet, or using a short jumper wire to replace the connector. If you have access to shut off power to the circuit, it's an easy DIY project. (I'd read up on proper 3-wire outlet wiring first, though - given the state of the system, there's apt to be some "anomalies". )
ducktape
Cool, thanks. I just thought the half-your-outlet-doesn't-work problem was that they forgot to hook that one plug up to the light switch, and that the second plug in the outlet was the was the always-on plug and had been connected properly. I'll check and see if they maybe just broke that connector off, I'd like to replace the outlet plug for sure if that's all it is.
I am sure when I get my new UPS I will have more electrical things to lol at, like low power warnings and power surge warnings every week. One question though, do I plug it as:
Wall -> Surge Protector -> UPS -> PC
or
Wall -> UPS -> Surge Protector -> PC
I assume the first one, with surge protector directly into the wall, is correct?
I am sure when I get my new UPS I will have more electrical things to lol at, like low power warnings and power surge warnings every week. One question though, do I plug it as:
Wall -> Surge Protector -> UPS -> PC
or
Wall -> UPS -> Surge Protector -> PC
I assume the first one, with surge protector directly into the wall, is correct?
Chthon
Quote:
Originally Posted by ducktape
Cool, thanks. I just thought the half-your-outlet-doesn't-work problem was that they forgot to hook that one plug up to the light switch, and that the second plug in the outlet was the was the always-on plug and had been connected properly. I'll check and see if they maybe just broke that connector off, I'd like to replace the outlet plug for sure if that's all it is.
I am sure when I get my new UPS I will have more electrical things to lol at, like low power warnings and power surge warnings every week. One question though, do I plug it as: Wall -> Surge Protector -> UPS -> PC or Wall -> UPS -> Surge Protector -> PC I assume the first one, with surge protector directly into the wall, is correct? |
Quaker
Quote:
Originally Posted by ducktape
Wall -> Surge Protector -> UPS -> PC
or Wall -> UPS -> Surge Protector -> PC |
Snograt
Sooooo....
outlet-sp-ups doesn't work
outlet-ups-sp is pointless (can't see a spike getting through a ups - though if you're really paranoid...)
outlet-sp-ups doesn't work
outlet-ups-sp is pointless (can't see a spike getting through a ups - though if you're really paranoid...)
ljonesj
i have a couple of surge protectors hooked up to my ups just to give me a few extra outlers but i have checked to make sure its ok and i still have a ton of room left on my estimate in my ups systems program
Lord Sojar
Get an Cyberpower UPS/SP, because they don't cost much and are highly effective.