Back-UPS garbage? (was: Quick survey -- UPSs on slave nodes?)
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Drew Raines drew-list-beowulf at poured.netTue Feb 11 07:57:25 PST 2003
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"Robert G. Brown" <rgb at phy.duke.edu> writes: > On Mon, 10 Feb 2003, Drew Raines wrote: > >> Has any one of you actually used these to sustain a PC for any >> measurable length of time? I'm not sure at what market this >> junk is aimed, perhaps suckers. > > In the Durham NC residential grid we have a power outage that > lasts approximately one second approximately once a month. [...] > I've recently started putting my home computers (which are all > members of my home cluster:-) on $50 cheap UPS because they are > enough to sustain a system across these frequent, short, outages. I work in a university research building where you'd expect the power to be consistent, especially since the whole medical center is battery-backup'ed (critical hospital systems being the primary reason). Oddly enough, we see those spikes or flickers all the time, so I got a Back-UPS 350 with the hopes of doing exactly what you said, surviving the frequent, short, outage. No go. After trying two machines and a monitor on the battery-backed plugs, just the two machines, and finally just one machine, I got the stupid thing to provide a couple seconds of life. But that was it. The box said 17 minutes under average load. I'd think one 200-watt power supply would be average enough. That was my Dell Precision 530 PC, sans monitor. When I tried only my Sun Ultra 30 (again, no monitor), *beep*, reboot. And then APC has the audactiy to include a serial cable as if that's useful. Until I find the serial port on my clock radio, that does me no good. (I've seen reports from others, though, that only the Smart-UPS line and up can signal a machine to safely shutdown anyway.) Long story short, I replaced it with a Smart-UPS 650 which seems to support both systems through mild outages. For $275, though, I wanted it to log in, check my e-mail, and respond appropriately to outstanding messages before it signaled a machine to halt. Oh well. -Drew
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