I remember years ago a big concern with computers, especially with high-end and overclocking, was that the power coming out of the socket was dirty (not exactly 50 or 60Hz). Between that and places where brownouts were common (either a localized or a regional issue), the advice was that one should invest in a power conditioner with voltage and current regulation. Some consumer products would offer such functionality combined with other things, like a UPS, or so they claimed.
Fast forward to today, and many PSUs advertise things like over and under voltage and current protection and promise "clean and stable power", which I'm making an assumption has meaning in that when combined with the other protections, it ensures a clean feed between PSU and MB, GPU, drives, etc.
With the SSD craze, sudden power loss can be a bit of an issue if you are in the process of doing almost anything. I have had a few outages, but they've typically been when the computer was idle, so I didn't see any data loss. However, my Win7 install has gotten flaky since the last sudden outage, which makes me wonder. It also looks like some people have the SSD vanish from to OS after sudden power loss, to the point that Crucial has a troubleshooting procedure for dealing with the issue.
As such, I've been thinking of getting a battery backup, but again see the basic ones, plus the ones that add in power conditioning and the like. With a modern PSU, is much of that necessary? Or are PSUs not really that great at power regulation and if you have such a concern, it's really best to get a UPS with built-in power regulation? Or do the UPS claims even lack validity?
Fast forward to today, and many PSUs advertise things like over and under voltage and current protection and promise "clean and stable power", which I'm making an assumption has meaning in that when combined with the other protections, it ensures a clean feed between PSU and MB, GPU, drives, etc.
With the SSD craze, sudden power loss can be a bit of an issue if you are in the process of doing almost anything. I have had a few outages, but they've typically been when the computer was idle, so I didn't see any data loss. However, my Win7 install has gotten flaky since the last sudden outage, which makes me wonder. It also looks like some people have the SSD vanish from to OS after sudden power loss, to the point that Crucial has a troubleshooting procedure for dealing with the issue.
As such, I've been thinking of getting a battery backup, but again see the basic ones, plus the ones that add in power conditioning and the like. With a modern PSU, is much of that necessary? Or are PSUs not really that great at power regulation and if you have such a concern, it's really best to get a UPS with built-in power regulation? Or do the UPS claims even lack validity?
