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Art Todesco Art Todesco is offline
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Default UPS vs DSL modem

On 2/17/2011 12:35 PM, jamesgangnc wrote:
On Feb 17, 10:41 am, wrote:
wrote :

I assume the smaller
ones keep costs and heat down by not running the power through a power
supply and inverter 100% of the time. Thus they have to switch
sources.


Correct. They feed line-voltage until that voltage fails to meet certain
pre-defined criteria. At that point the battery/inverter is switched-in.
The switching time is on the order of milliseconds, short enough that the
gap isn't noticeable to the equipment.

Maybe older UPS's used caps to bridge the gap if the switches were too slow
to be invisible to the equipment. I'm guessing here.

--
Tegger


You can't use a cap cause how would that work? Caps don't store ac.
The inverter isn't on until it decideds to switch.


Well, actually, I can, because the wallwart puts out 12VDC and the
cap would be across that 12 volts. I agree with one poster that
measuring the current and then calculate the time gained by a
particular cap. But, I think I found the real reason. I think it's
the ISP.
I'll post more later.