Out of curiosity, what is the exact model of the APC UPS causing trouble? There's more than 2 types of UPSs, there is also the middle ground, line interactive UPSs which have an autoformer that can boost and trim voltage. I'm wonder if this one is a cheapy standby type or line interactive.
Most home UPSes are standby. If it was dual conversion I'm sure this would not be an issue. I don't know if it's the EXACT model, but it looks like this one:
http://www.apc.com/products/resource/include/techspec_index.cfm?base_sku=BR1000G
Though that one says line interactive, is that the same as dual conversion? If yes then it's not that model, I know theirs is standby, since I did not pay much for it, maybe 100 bucks.
Not sure what PSU they use, I'd have to check when I go there.
A line filter costs less than a new UPS or a ferroresonant transformer. What power supply does your parents' computer use? Some have no line filters.
Most voltage drop problems in household wiring can be solved by fixing loose connections.
Is there any way to do that with a junkyard full of ferroresonant transformers from Zenith TVs made in the 1970s?Line filters (basic hash) are LC and keep RFI out of the lines but won't do much to help with inverse spikes.
Fully galvanic isolation from the mains in the form of a motor generator (MG) or Ferroresonant transformer will solve the problem. Unfortunately at great expense but in the case of the latter still less than correcting premise wiring issues unless it's simple, i.e. loose connection.
Those numbers make the problem obvious. "you know weak connections exists somewhere between that receptacle and the breaker box." Current from a printer should never cause an 8 volt drop. In most cases, it is only a loose connection. In some rare cases, that 8 volts is reporting a serous human safety threat.Their UPS does show the line voltage though, so I turned on the printer and it dropped down to 110. It was already at 118 idle.
Is there any way to do that with a junkyard full of ferroresonant transformers from Zenith TVs made in the 1970s?
Those numbers make the problem obvious. "you know weak connections exists somewhere between that receptacle and the breaker box." Current from a printer should never cause an 8 volt drop. In most cases, it is only a loose connection. In some rare cases, that 8 volts is reporting a serous human safety threat.
The printer should cause a voltage drop of less than 1 volt if connected only 40 feet to the breaker box. Your numbers suggest something, easily corrected inside walls, is generating 50 watts of unacceptable heat. Those numbers should have immediately caused concern.
Never cure such problems with a UPS. Solve the problem - not its symptoms.
110 is well above minimum voltage for every 120 volt computer.
Its title is a power filter. But read the specification numbers. Not a single number claims filtering. Spec numbers says it is a surge protector equivalent to many selling for $60 or $10. It operates no different than a $3 power strip except when 120 AC mains voltage exceeds maybe 330 volts.Would something like this work? Though, do these actually regulate the voltage if it goes too low? Not too sure exactly what they do,
Would something like this work? Though, do these actually regulate the voltage if it goes too low? Not too sure exactly what they do, I think they're more for surges than brownouts. I could plug that in first then plug the UPS into it.
http://www.tigerdirect.ca/applicatio...912&CatId=4715
I'm debating on actually picking one or two up for myself to protect my server stuff as I only have some basic "surge strips" and when I redo my power I will be able to perhaps get rid of these and use my new PDUs instead. One for UPS power and one for direct AC. So the one for direct AC will for sure have to be surge protected, but probably not a bad idea to protect the UPS too.
Again, normal voltage for any electronics is even when incandescent bulbs dim to 50% intensity. Are your lights dimming that much? If lights are dimming only to 75% intensity, then voltage is ideal for electronics. And a potential human safety threat exists inside the walls. Cure the problem; not its symptoms.Guess it makes sense it needs some kind of variac and high speed control circuit to bring it up/down, that or it has to act as a sorta dual conversion UPS to invert the AC phase.
First, a UPS (such as this one) can put 270 volts spikes on its 120 volt output. Why? Because international design standards even 40 years ago required electronics to be so robust. One chart show no damage even with spikes of up to 600 volts.Electronics tend to be very sensitive to voltage spikes/loss so it's normal that if the voltage is going too low it causes issues, but the UPS should be picking up on that and it isin't.
