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Gordon Burditt wrote:
Can the backup battery like I use for my computer be used as a backup for a sump pump? The batteries I saw advertised for sump pumps cost considerably more plus you had to add acid bought separately. They were not maintenance free and seem to have a very limited life. The computer backup battery works fine, is maintenance free, costs less, and has enough power for my computer, monitor, and modem, with several outlets to spare. Can I get a battery like this for a sump pump or don't they have enough power? Bewa what works fine for powering a computer may not work well, or may be damaged, trying to power an inductive load like motors. Inductive spikes are known for taking out semiconductors like those used in DC-to-AC conversion (whether it hurts the actual batteries or not). I've managed to kill a few power inverters powered from my car battery to AC to power a laptop, just from inductive spikes coming from the car engine, with ratings WAY over the power actually taken by the laptop. Some DC-to-AC converters produce a square wave or a triangle wave rather than a true sine wave. This may not be much of a problem for computer power supplies, but it may be a big problem for motors, possibly causing overheating without actually powering the motor much. Try to find a power spec for your sump pump, in VA or Watts. (Also, 1 Horsepower = 735 Watts, but that's output power, so you have to add about 40% to that, so 1HP = 1000 Watts). Compare this with the VA rating on your backup power. I'd want a VA rating on the backup power about 5 times that of the motor. Also note anything stated about powering inductive loads in your backup power device (look it up on the Internet if you don't have the instructions). It may just not work at all. Now, how long did you want the sump pump to run? During a near-flood, or collapsed roof combined with heavy rain, it's going to be running continuously. If that computer backup runs, it might keep going for 3 minutes before running out of juice. That's not enough. I googled "UPS for sump pump". It recommended some APC units with a VA rating of 2200 or 3000 VA ($250 - $500, discounted). (These are also good for powering racks of computers.) Your common UPS for computers have ratings from 250 to 750 VA ($28 - $49, discounted). I don't think attempting to cascade 10 cheap computer backups is going to work very well. Also, consider how well your backup solution will work if it gets wet. You might want to mount it on the basement ceiling or on an upper floor. Thanks for the informative reply. |
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