I work at Home Depot in the plumbing department. I decided to get a job at Home Depot because I figured I could learn a lot more than if I got a job flipping burgers. The job is basically a way to spend my free time after I switched from Computer Engineering (hardware) to Finance.
I thought this question was funny because I am a huge computer nerd: (it also left me curious)
Anyway, I had some guys come in today (one with a Newegg.com cap) with a 'plumbing' question. They wanted to place 3" dryer duct around their electrical wires for shielding because their 'electrical precise instrument' was being affected by interference. I began by telling them to try a line conditioner first because they are made to eliminate AC interference. They told me their instrument was plugged into a 1000VA APC UPS along with a computer and a modem. So, I told them to call APC because their unit was probably failing to condition the line properly. Then, they said that wasn't it because they had 5 other setups that all worked fine using the same type of APC unit. So, I told them to call APC because their unit was probably failing to condition the line properly. They decided to go with some length of 3" dryer duct to put over their internal building wiring. I guess this is because it is much easier and cheaper to put 3" dryer duct over the internal building wiring than it is to call APC.
So anyway, am I right? Shouldn't a 1000VA APC UPS be able to condition the interference caused by flourescent lighting out of a power line? Or, is the line conditioning in a UPS crappy? Is 3" aluminum dryer duct going to fix the interference?
Either way, they were definitely surprised to see a young dude in plumbing talk about computers.
I thought this question was funny because I am a huge computer nerd: (it also left me curious)
Anyway, I had some guys come in today (one with a Newegg.com cap) with a 'plumbing' question. They wanted to place 3" dryer duct around their electrical wires for shielding because their 'electrical precise instrument' was being affected by interference. I began by telling them to try a line conditioner first because they are made to eliminate AC interference. They told me their instrument was plugged into a 1000VA APC UPS along with a computer and a modem. So, I told them to call APC because their unit was probably failing to condition the line properly. Then, they said that wasn't it because they had 5 other setups that all worked fine using the same type of APC unit. So, I told them to call APC because their unit was probably failing to condition the line properly. They decided to go with some length of 3" dryer duct to put over their internal building wiring. I guess this is because it is much easier and cheaper to put 3" dryer duct over the internal building wiring than it is to call APC.
So anyway, am I right? Shouldn't a 1000VA APC UPS be able to condition the interference caused by flourescent lighting out of a power line? Or, is the line conditioning in a UPS crappy? Is 3" aluminum dryer duct going to fix the interference?
Either way, they were definitely surprised to see a young dude in plumbing talk about computers.
