Monday, November 11, 2013

Buy CyberPower PR1500LCD Smart App Sinewave UPS 1500VA 1050W SNMP/HTTP Mini-Tower

Amazon.com: Cyberpower 850 8-Outlet Surge Suppressor - 2400
Amazon.com: Cyberpower 850 8-Outlet Surge Suppressor - 2400 Joules 15A RJ11 EMI/RFI: Computers & Accessories









Buy CyberPower PR1500LCD Smart App Sinewave UPS 1500VA 1050W SNMP/HTTP Mini-Tower

CyberPower PR1500LCD Smart App Sinewave UPS 1500VA 1050W SNMP/HTTP Mini-Tower

Price : Check It Here Special Price Buy CyberPower PR1500LCD Smart App Sinewave UPS 1500VA 1050W SNMP/HTTP Mini-Tower
Code : B0083TXNMM
* Special discount only for limited time

Product Feature


  • 1500VA/1050 Watts, Pure Sine Wave UPS system - designed to support Active PFC power supplies and conventional power supplies
  • Line interactive, AVR and GreenPower - Corrects brownouts and overvoltage without using the battery. GreenPower UPS reduces energy consumption up to 75%.
  • LCD Control Panel provides 41 different settings to check status and customize settings
  • Protects mission-critical servers, telecom equipment, VoIP and internetworking hardware
  • Output Connections: (8) NEMA 5-15R Battery Backup & Surge Protected Outlets

Product Description


The CyberPower Smart App Sinewave PR1500LCD mini-tower uninterruptible power supply (UPS) with LCD Control Panel and pure sine wave output is Active PFC compatible for safeguarding mission-critical servers, telecom equipment, VoIP and internetworking hardware that require seamless pure sine wave power. Its full Automatic Voltage Regulation (AVR) boost/buck topology delivers a consistent and clean AC power, protecting connected equipment and preventing costly business interruptions. Patented GreenPower UPS advanced circuitry reduces UPS energy costs by up to 75% compared to competitive models. The LCD Control Panel provides 41 different settings to check status and customize the operating settings for the PR1500LCD, plus it can be removed and mounted separately from the UPS for ease of use regardless of where the UPS is installed. With its attached cable the LCD Control Panel can be removed from the UPS and relocated up to 4.5 FT away from the UPS for ease of viewing when installed in hard to reach locations. The PR1500LCD unit has a capacity of 1500VA/1050Watts, eight (8) NEMA 5-15R receptacles and two (2) maintenance-free, user-replaceable 12V/17AH batteries. This unit offers connectivity via one (1) HID USB, one (1) DB9 serial and one (1) emergency power off (EPO) port. EMI/RFI filters increase the immunity of the load to noise disturbances. This UPS unit incorporates microprocessor-based fully digital control and includes PowerPanel Business Edition providing the user unsurpassed flexibility and control. An optional SNMP/HTTP Remote Management adapter (RMCARD202) supports remote management and control of the PR1500LCD through a standard web browser. A Three-Year Warranty ensures that this UPS has passed our highest quality standards in design, assembly, material or workmanship and further protection is offered by a $375,000 Connected Equipment Guarantee.


Product Detail


  • Color: Black
  • Brand: CyberPower
  • Model: PR1500LCD
  • Original language:English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.70" h x6.70" w x17.00" l,3.38 pounds




Maybe you should visit the following website to get a better price and specification details


Product Reviews

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
5Much Quieter than APC unit
By D. Card
I never write reviews but I wrote this to help out someone else who ran into the same issue I did.

I bought this for one reason - the Three APC units I purchased all made the most annoying buzzing sound you can imagine. This unit has solved that issue 100%.

If you have experienced this issue with an APC supply, try this one.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
5Works great and worth the price
By Chicago Pro
I've got a few of these now, doing duty in different locations in the house.
When the power from the power company glitches (which it does fairly often), it's very nice to
not lose my internet connection, having my computers reboot, and several other electronic devices keep on ticking.
Because it provides a pure sine wave out, it works with even my most finicky computer systems - some of which do not tolerate the pseudo sine UPS systems (the cheaper ones.)

8 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
4Comparing Pure Sine Wave UPS for Home/Office from APC and Cyberpower
By Neil E. Isenberg
This review is for: CyberPower PR750LCD 525W UPS

OVERVIEW:
-----------

The home and small office UPS models we'll compare are:

- APC: SMT750, SMT1000
- APC: SMC1000, SMC1500
- CyberPower: CP850PFCLCD, CP1000PFCLCD, CP1350PFCLCD
- CyberPower: PR750LCD, PR1000LCD, PR1500LCD

These all:

(A) KEEP ELECTRICITY GOING DURING A BLACKOUT and give a computer TIME TO SAFELY AUTO-SHUTDOWN.

(B) Produce a PURE SINE WAVE to work with power supplies with Active PFC, like those on most Apple Macs, lots of newer windows PCs, etc.

(C) Cost in the low hundreds, so we avoid server room type features like zero transfer time, external batteries, etc.

We'll compare:
- How long things run during a blackout (RUNTIME)
- The WATTS they handle
- NOISE
- OUTLET COUNT and how many have battery power

We'll also compare:
- AVR CAPABILITY including BOOST and TRIM (explained later)
- RECHARGE TIME
- Size, cord length, other

Okay, let's get started, I'm looking for two that are quiet, can shutdown Window PCs and Macs safely, have good runtime, and some other things.

(1)
SOME DESCRIPTIVE
DIFFERENCES:
-------------------

Model legend:
APC
A - SMT750
B - SMT1000
C - SMC1000
D - SMC1500
CyberPower
E - CP850PFCLCD
F - CP1000PFCLCD
G - CP1350PFCLCD
H - PR750LCD
I - PR1000LCD
J - PR1500LCD

Feature legend:
AmpHr - Each Battery's Ampere Hour
B - Number Batteries
R - Recharge Time
S - Footprint (Square inches)
W - Weight (lbs.)
F - Fan (Yes/No)
G - More generator friendly (Yes/No)
N - Novice user friendly (Yes/No)

Here are some descriptive differences between the models
I summarize in a manner I hope helps to compare.

__Watt_AmpHr_B_R______WxHxD_____S_W_F_G_N_Outlets

A _500 _7.0Ah 1 3h 5.4"x_6.3"x14.1" _76 29 N Y N 6both*
B _700 11.0Ah 2 3h 6.7"x_8.6"x17.3" 116 42 N Y N 8both
C _600 11.0Ah 2 3h 6.7"x_8.6"x17.3" 116 38 N N N 8both
D _900 11.0Ah 2 3h 6.7"x_8.6x"17.3" 116 45 Y N N 8both
E _510 _8.5Ah 1 8h 3.9"x_9.1"x10.4" _41 15 Y N Y 5surge+5both
F _600 _9.0Ah 1 8h 3.9"x_9.1"x10.4" _41 16 Y N Y 5surge+5both
G _810 _7.0Ah 2 8h 3.9"x10.4"x14.2" _55 20 Y N Y 5surge+5both
H _525 _7.0Ah 2 8h 5.4"x_6.4"x13.7" _74 27 Y Y N 6both
I _700 12.0Ah 2 8h 6.7"x_8.7"x17.0" 114 44 Y Y N 8both
J 1050 17.0Ah 2 8h 6.7"x_8.7"x17.0" 114 54 Y Y N 8both

*both = surge and battery protection

Notes:

- You rarely see recharge times as long as they list, you also rarely have an empty battery after a blackout, unless you configure for that. Expect faster recharge times.

- Generator friendly is if support claims the model plays well with generators.

- Novice user friendly is if a computer novice could likely get the UPS set-up without much help or effort (sort of plug-and-play). These companies offer strong tech support if needed.

- Note you can avoid losing outlets to bulky transformers with short patch cords and you can increase outlets with a PDU (consider avoiding a surge protector strip, see surge protection section for why).
1-Foot Extension Power Cable, 5-Pack
APC AP9562 Basic Rack PDU 1U/15A/120V 10 outlets

(2)
RUNTIME (mins) ON BATTERY
AT DIFFERENT LOADS:
----------------------------

APC
A - SMT750
B - SMT1000
C - SMC1000
D - SMC1500
CyberPower
E - CP850PFCLCD
F - CP1000PFCLCD
G - CP1350PFCLCD
H - PR750LCD
I - PR1000LCD
J - PR1500LCD

______A__B_C__D_E__F_G__H__I__J
LOAD
100W 50 99 49 66 31 36 45 45 97 147
200W 22 45 25 35 13 15 22 22 46 83
300W 12 25 16 23 _7 _8 13 12 30 50
400W _7 15 11 16 _3 _5 _9 _8 20 36
500W _4 10 _8 12 _2 _3 _6 _6 16 25
600W __ _7 _6 _9 __ _2 _4 __ 11 18
700W __ _6 __ _7 __ __ _3 __ _9 15
800W __ __ __ _6 __ __ _2 __ __ 13
900W __ __ __ _5 __ __ __ __ __ 11
_1KW __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ _9

(these above are from the manufacturers)

- Here are some REAL WORLD TESTED COMPUTER RUNTIMES measured from blackout start TO START OF COMPUTER HIBERNATION (configured to hibernate close to battery running out). These times depend on UPS battery charge measurement capability and hibernate timing flexibility, not just battery size.

100W TEST:

SMT750: hibernate starts at 47m
CP850LCD: hibernate starts at 23m
PR750LCD: hibernate starts at 29m

200W TEST:

SMT750: hibernate starts at 23m
CP850LCD: hibernate starts at 7.5m
PR750LCD: hibernate starts at 9.75m

300W TEST:

SMT750: hibernate starts at 12.5m
CP850LCD: hibernate starts at 2.75m
PR750LCD: hibernate starts at 5m

400W TEST:

SMT750: hibernate starts at 5.75m
CP850LCD: hibernate starts at 0.5m
PR750LCD: hibernate starts at 1.5m

All loads measured directly and externally (not with their UPS internal meters and to avoid UPS efficiency differences). Batteries first get 10 hour charge for tests.

- Consider choosing a UPS with claimed runtime at least 50% MORE THAN YOU THINK YOU NEED.

- These UPS will shut-off WELL BEFORE THEY REACH 0% battery, often at 9%-20% full. This way when the electricity returns they come back on without needing manual restart.

- Slightly lowered the runtime of 100W for the SMT1000 for readability.

(3)
NOISE:
-------

APC SMT750/SMT1000:

These have NO FAN (APC models with 1400VA+ and those with external batteries have fans). I only hear a SMT750 MAKE NOISE WHEN ON BATTERY POWER (ex: blackout), they make a fairly QUIET HUMMING like an aquarium pump, tested at 100W, 200W, 300W, and 400W. I measured 38dB (APC says 41dB max), in a quiet room you can hear it, but it's not loud nor annoying. You can configure for no alert beeps, too.

It would FORCE THE UPS TO MAKE NOISE if you plug something in that FLICKERS, like a lamp that flickers just a little at a lower dimmer setting.

APC SMC1000:

Has NO FAN. Likely same noise profile as SMT1000 (above).

APC SMC1500:

Has fan (APC estimates 45dB max) which runs when:
- The battery charges
- The unit supplies battery power
- The temperature hits 104F
- The load is over 75% of unit wattage capability (675W+).

CYBERPOWER PR750LCD/PR1000LCD/PR1500LCD:

I hear a PR750LCD MAKE NOISE ONLY WHEN ON BATTERY POWER, only 39-41dB up close. The humming noise is like a quiet aquarium pump, can be heard in a quiet room but isn't annoying. It has a fan, though I have not heard it run at 100W, 200W, 300W, or 400W loads on a PR750LCD.

The PR1500LCD fan though CAN clearly be heard I'm told (on battery power). I'm told it's only as loud as a "quiet conversation". I don't know about the PR1000LCD.

You can configure for no alert beeps (APPLY ENABLE and then APPLY DISABLE on the Config page).

It would FORCE THE UPS TO MAKE NOISE at 44dB or so at 1' if you plug something in that FLICKERS, like a lamp that flickers a bit at a low dimmer setting.

CYBERPOWER CP850PFCLCD/CP1000PFCLCD/CP1350PFCLCD:

These have a small fan in them. When the fan runs, which I HEAR ONLY WHEN ON BATTERY POWER on a CP850PFCLCD, it has a quiet but audible, higher pitch sound. I measured 39dB at 1' at 100W, 200W, 300W, and 400W loads, so it's fairly quiet. You can configure for no alert beeps, too.

(4)
ABILITY TO SHUTDOWN
COMPUTERS SAFELY:
-----------------------

These models can all shutdown Windows PCs and Apple Macs (OS version dependent) safely during power issues (most Linux flavors, too). Except for PCs or OS that predate Hibernate, of course. More on the Apple Mac graceful shutdown in the Apple section later.

> WHAT IS HIBERNATE:

To SAVE THINGS JUST AS THEY WERE before a blackout (not just shutdown) these UPS models can put a Windows PC into HIBERNATE. On Apple Macs this is called SAFE SLEEP (OSX 10.4+). The computers know how to do this, the UPS just tells them to.

For some UPS's we must configure the hibernate option (vs. shutdown), for others it's the default.

HIBERNATE doesn't "save" an open document, but rather freezes it in time so upon starting the computer everything is just as it was before.

> HIBERNATE vs. SHUTDOWN:

If you tell it to SHUTDOWN gracefully WITHOUT HIBERNATE mode, the computer will often ask users to save their work (ex: word docs) and then it will shutdown often too quickly for anyone to save it. Thus hibernate is often chosen.

Of these, only the CyberPower PRxxxLCD allows the OPTION of TRULY SAVING open application files (ex: word docs) while it does a SHUTDOWN on the computer. Most folks, however, want the choice whether to save the file in its present state or not after hibernation, but there it is if you need it.

> WINDOWS - IS HIBERNATE SAME AS SLEEP?:

No. HIBERNATE saves the RAM to hard drive and shuts the computer down. This was invented for laptops to save battery and be less at risk of the hard drive writing while being jostled. SLEEP doesn't shut things down, it just saves energy and restarts faster than hibernate.

> SMART CARDS:

APC SMT and CyberPower PR models can have "SMART CARDS" plugged in to allow the graceful shutdown of multiple computers on the network even if the computers aren't plugged into the UPS. As noted in the Apple section below, older versions of SMT software allowed this for Apple Macs, but no longer.

(5)
APPLE COMPUTERS (MACS/OSX):
-------------------------------

Setting an Apple Mac to allow a UPS to shutdown safely is different below OSX 10.6 vs. 10.6+. The directions for this is in an APC doc (it works for CyberPower, too), "How to configure native shutdown on Macintosh OS X .." (avail online or from support).

With Apple Macs the user configures the Apple OSX's Energy Saver shutdown options (System Preferences) to allow a UPS signal to the Mac (via USB) to shut the computer down safely. The USB must be connected from the UPS to the Mac for the UPS preferences option to show. Some OSX versions MAY HAVE A BUG that don't allow the shutdown preferences to save after a computer restart, be sure to test. I know it works in 10.6.8.

There is no APC or CyberPower software now to load on Apple Macs for DISPLAYING OR CONFIGURING UPS settings. You could do so from UPS display buttons (more so with SMT and PRxxxLCD) or from a Windows PC and then switch the USB connection back to the Apple Mac. You could even get a super cheap used Windows laptop just for that purpose.

> APC:

Can UPS shutdown 1 Apple Mac? - YES
Can UPS shutdown 2+ Apple Macs over Network? (w/network card) - NOT ANY MORE
Can Apple Mac be used to view or configure UPS? - NO

If you add a NETWORK CARD to an APC SMT model there USED TO BE software to load on Apple Macs to allow the UPS to safely shutdown many Apple Macs over the network, however it's just Windows and Linux now. APC support didn't know if this will return for Macs nor for what OSX versions it used to work for.

> CYBERPOWER:

Can my UPS shutdown 1 Apple Mac? - YES
Can my UPS shutdown 2+ Apple Macs over Network? - NO
Can Apple Mac be used to view or configure UPS? - NO

A PR model with a NETWORK CARD can safely shutdown lots of computers over the network. However, it never did for Apple computers.

(6)
AVR AND CONTROL OF VOLTAGE
LEVELS FOR BATTERY KICK-IN:
------------------------------

All these models have AVR (Automatic Voltage Regulation).

With AVR, WITHOUT USING THE BATTERY, when voltage drops into a low range (brownout) the voltage steps up (boost) by either a fixed amount or a percentage. When the voltage rises into a high range way above 120V (overload) AVR steps the voltage down (trim).

If the voltage drops even below the low AVR range (ex: under 82V-106V), or rises even above the high AVR range (ex: over 127V-144V), the unit TRANSFERS to battery power (120V). Those voltage levels (default or user set) where AVR or regular AC power stops and the battery kicks in are TRANSFER POINTS.

Some models ONLY HAVE AVR BOOST (no trim), like APC SMC and Cyberpower CPxxxPFCLCD models. APC SMT and Cyberpower PR models have both AVR boost and trim.

Here is a comparative summary:

APC
A - SMT750
B - SMT1000
C - SMC1000
D - SMC1500
CyberPower
E - CP850PFCLCD
F - CP1000PFCLCD
G - CP1350PFCLCD
H - PR750LCD
I - PR1000LCD
J - PR1500LCD

A/B:
AVR boost: Yes
AVR trim: Yes
You can set transfer point from utility/online to AVR Boost: 97V-106V (default 106V)
You can set transfer point from utility/online to AVR Trim: 127V-136V (default 127V)

C/D:
AVR boost: Yes
AVR trim: No
You can set voltage transfer points INDIRECTLY through the sensitivity setting.
The transfer point from AVR Boost to battery is always 95V, I'm told.
SENSITIVITY
Low_ - Transfer point from utility/online to AVR Boost is 97V, to battery high is 136V
Med_ - Transfer point from utility/online to AVR Boost is 103V, to battery high is 130V
High - Transfer point from utility/online to AVR Boost is 106V, to battery high is 127V (default)

E/F/G:
AVR boost: Yes
AVR trim: No
You can set transfer point from utility/online to AVR Boost: 97V-106V (default 102V)
You can set transfer point from utility/online to Battery: 127V-136V (default 131V)

H/I/J:
AVR boost: Yes
AVR trim: Yes
You can only set lowest/highest voltage (before AVR kicks in) with the SENSITIVITY (low/med/high) setting.
It only looks like you can also select the voltages directly, however it is a confirmed bug, just ignore.

(7)
"SENSITIVITY" SETTINGS:
-------------------------

The sensitivity setting means something different for each model family.

> APC SMTxxx ("POWER QUALITY SENSITIVITY"):

- NORMAL (Default)
*2ms-4ms Transfer time

- REDUCED
*6ms-8ms Transfer time

- LOW
*8ms-10ms Transfer time

TRANSFER TIME is the time taken to switch to battery power. APC says longer transfer times are better for noisy electrical environments like lower power quality home generators. This can reduce the switching to battery and lengthen battery life in that circumstance.

> APC SMCxxx ("POWER QUALITY SENSITIVITY"):

- NORMAL (Default)
*2ms-4ms Transfer time
*Sets low transfer point from online/utility to AVR Boost at 106V
*Sets high transfer point from online/utility to battery at 127V

- REDUCED
*6ms-8ms Transfer time
*Sets low transfer point from online/utility to AVR Boost at 103V
*Sets high transfer point from online/utility to battery at 130V

- LOW
*8ms-10ms Transfer time
*Sets low transfer point from online/utility to AVR Boost at 97V
*Sets high transfer point from online/utility to battery at 136V

> CYBERPOWER CPxxxPFCLCD ("INPUT VOLTAGE SENSITIVITY"):

- HIGH (CyberPower Recommended if quality power source)
*Sets battery transfer points to 88V/136V

- MEDIUM (Default)
*Sets battery transfer points to 88V/139V (DEFAULT).

- LOW
*Sets battery transfer points to 78V/144V. Best setting if the power is from a low quality power source like many home generators. Support noted their OL (online) models work even better with generators.

Support says transfer time is ALMOST ALWAYS AROUND 4ms, so sensitivity setting has no affect on transfer time (unlike the APC models).

> CYBERPOWER PRxxxLCD ("DETECTED SENSITIVITY"):

- HIGH
*Sets AVR low/high transfer points to 88V/136V into a tighter range to use AVR less and battery more, resulting in more stable power but more battery use.

- MEDIUM
*Sets AVR transfer points to 88V/139V (Default).

- LOW
*Sets AVR transfer points to 78V/142V to use AVR more and battery less, reducing battery use if input voltage ranges that much.

Support says transfer time is ALMOST ALWAYS AROUND 4ms, so sensitivity setting has no affect on transfer time (unlike the APC models).

(8)
SURGE PROTECTION
AND EMI/RFI INTERFERENCE
REDUCTION:
---------------------------

All these models have UL1449 3rd Edition Listedsurge protection. They were tested with powerful surges and survived still operational.

- CLAMPING VOLTAGE:

This is the maximum voltage allowed through to the equipment, the lower the better of course. During the period power is not allowed through due to clamping, the UPS is supplying power. Note that there is debate which is a more useful measure for surge suppression, clamping voltage or let-through voltage (technically not the same).

You might ask of what use is clamping voltage for a UPS, after all for example 330V clamping voltage is much higher than any voltage level the UPS switches to AVR or battery. Clamping voltage is an extra layer of protection for a UPS due to the power and speed of many transient surges.

CyberPower - 330V CLAMPING VOLTAGE
APC - 330V CLAMPING VOLTAGE

- SACRIFICIAL?:

CyberPower and APC - All these models are sacrificial for big surges (per support), bigger than the UL1449 test surges, of course. The button on the back is the classic circuit breaker OVERLOAD PROTECTION like all good modern certified surge protectors have (they strongly recommend 12A max, they often trip on 15A). This helps prevent fires, but does not make a unit non-sacrificial per se.

- JOULES:

I've included the values here and will let the user decide if it is important, just know that it is a matter of controversy. Many engineers conclude that standards bodies feel that Joules is an inferior, misleading measure by which to compare a units suppression capability.

CyberPower - These are rated 1030 Joules
APC - These are rated 455-540 Joules

- EMI/RFI NOISE/INTERFERENCE REDUCTION:

This is more than just helpful to audio and media hardware. This can greatly help lower let through voltage from surges more than MOVs do alone in the 50kHz-150kHZ range according to a well considered Eaton white paper.

CyberPower - Their models here have EMI/RFI NOISE ATTENUATION max of 48dB in the 150kHz to 100MHz range.
APC - Don't have APC numbers for this.

- ETHERNET AND COAX/CABLE
SURGE PROTECTION:

Only the CyberPower CPxxxPFCLCD models have these built-in, too.

If using the SMC/SMT or PR models one needs separate surge protection for ethernet and/or coax/cable. Dedicated Coax/Cable and/or Ethernet surge protection and a little patch cabling to make it work is easy to find online.

The Ethernet surge protection is for 10/100 Base-T Ethernet, NOT GIGABIT Ethernet (1000 Base-T).

- ISOLATED OUTLETS:

None of these models have isolated outlets (i.e., like Isobars, Furman PST-8D, etc.).

- DISPLAYING SITE WIRING ISSUES:

An example of a site wiring issue is if electrical ground is missing in an old home, thus the unit surge protection is inactive. They all report this, the APC SMT's and CyberPower PRxxxLCD's report this actively on displays and the CPxxxPFCLCD's do so with a LED bulb on the back.

- CAN I PLUG-IN SURGE PROTECTOR
BEFORE OR AFTER UPS?:

The manufacturers said technically yes and said many clients do, but they don't recommend it. Some reasons manufacturers recommend against it include:

(a) UL1449 surge protection certification is for plugging the unit right into a wall outlet.
(b) Can cause UPS to misjudge actual wattage going through, possibly causing overload.
(c) Should be using PDU's instead for efficient power distribution.
(d) Surge protectors in-line with each other can actually increase total tolerance for surges, reducing effectiveness.
(e) User loses equipment protection coverage, among other reasons because determining liability becomes difficult.

PDUs plugged into an APC UPS that aren't APC made won't void the UPS warranty I'm told but can void the equipment protection guarantee.

(9) WARRANTY:
---------------

Here are 2 harder to find warranty-related notes:

- APC offers 1yr and 3yr EXTENDED WARRANTIES on SMC/SMT models that raise TECH SUPPORT COVERAGE TO 24x7 (and other benefits). Both the kind for new purchases and the kind for renewing before a present warranty runs out are available.

- The retail box for the APC SMT models have a code with instructions for increasing the battery warranty from 2 to 3 years (SMT unit warranty is 3 years).

(10)
OTHER PHYSICAL DIFFERENCES:
-------------------------------

POWER CORDS:

APC SMC/SMT: 6'
Cyberpower PRxxxLCD: 6'
Cyberpower CPxxxPFCLCD: 5'

PERCEIVED TOUGHNESS:

APC SMC/SMT: Tough, metal, and inflexible
Cyberpower PRxxxLCD: Tough, metal, and inflexible
Cyberpower CPxxxPFCLCD: Tough, plastic, and mostly inflexible

(11)
TECHNICAL SUPPORT
AND DOCUMENTATION:
----------------------

Both APC and CyberPower offer strong technical support. Consider which is available DURING YOUR OFF-HOURS if you may need that.

APC Tech Support
Hours: M-F 8A-8P EST (5A-5P PST)
Locations: Rhode Island, California, and the Philippines
Extended Warranty ($): 24x7 Support

CyberPower Tech Support
Hours: M-F 9A-6P EST (6A-3P PST)
Location: Minnesota

Both company's technical documentation could use improvement. Some users manuals have as little as 2 pages and are in tiny print.

As also noted in the warranty section here, APC offers 24x7 TECH SUPPORT with 1yr and 3yr EXTENDED WARRANTIES on SMC/SMT models.

(12)
DISPLAYS:
----------

APC SMT and Cyberpower PRxxxLCD
displays:

- Detailed status alerts in words.
- Rotates through power/battery info so don't need to keep hitting a button.
- More configuration and activating possible with display buttons.

APC SMC and CyberPower CPxxxPFCLCD displays:

- Great looking display using icons for novice ease of understanding.
- Have to keep hitting a display button to rotate through values.
- Less configuration and activating possible with display buttons.

Note: Read online guides like CPxxxPFCLCD's "Function Setup Guide" to learn how to configure with display buttons.

(13)
SOME LITTLE THINGS:
---------------------

- Event and power info logging by APC SMC/SMT and CyberPower PRxxxLCD is excellent, the latter even sporting colorful event category icons. The CPxxxPFCLCD models display event counts, not a log.

- Only APC models report TEMPERATURE in the UPS. The CyberPower models react to high temperature but don't log or report it.

- All these UPS recharge when off but plugged in.

WHICH IS EASIEST TO USE:
---------------------------

The CyberPower CPxxxPFCLCD models are the most CONSUMER-FRIENDLY and the EASIEST TO USE and manage we review here. For example:

- The included GUI software is super user-friendly.
- The easiest to move around, like a super heavy book.
- Events/Alerts are reported in thought bubbles from the task bar of the screen.

The very USER-FRIENDLY GUI (Powerpanel Personal Edition - PPPE) included has more limited, more selective configuration and monitoring capabilities.

> SOME OF PPPE'S CONS:

- It DOES EVENT LOGGING COUNTS WELL for different time periods and displays time of the last event. However, unlike the other models it has NO EVENT LOGGING (not even event start and stop times)**.

- No ALERT EMAILING/texting (The APC's and the PR's do) with included PPPE software**.

- It requires the RUNTIME LEFT on the UPS before computer shutdown to be AT LEAST 5 MINUTES. Some users prefer more control over runtime IF THEY HAVE A FAST SHUTDOWN (ex: Put OS on solid state drive).

- It does NOT have LOGGING OF POWER INFO, which tracks power values like frequency, voltage, load, etc. The SMC/SMT and PRxxxLCD models do.

**Note: We can download the PowerPanel Business Edition to get the EMAILING/texting alert or event logging ability on a CPxxxPFCLCD. However, PPBE is less attuned to the needs of a novice and there are compatibility issues, though if these features are critical to you, you can make it work.

"ADAPTIVE SINEWAVE"
DOCUMENTATION MISUNDERSTANDING
FOR THE CPxxxPFCLCD MODELS:
------------------------------------

The CPxxxPFCLCD models output a PURE SINE WAVE and CyberPower states they always have. However, they still have web and paper documentation that use THEIR OLD MARKETING TERM "Adaptive Sinewave" which mistakenly suggests it produces a modified sine wave. Also a 2010 article by a respected website said this was a modified sinewave, however CyberPower says this isn't so and never was.

WHAT ABOUT
CYBERPOWER PP MODELS?:
--------------------------

The PP models work just fine, however they don't have some features expected by the market today and are being PHASED OUT, and essentially absorbed by the long-running PR model line.

HOW MUCH WATTAGE DOES MY STUFF NEED?:
---------------------------------------------

You might consider measuring wattage used if you don't have a ballpark. Here are some relatively inexpensive meters/strips that measure wattage.
- Watts Up Pro Electricity Consumption Meter
- P3 International P4460 Kill A Watt EZ Electricity Usage Monitor
- P3 International P4400 Kill A Watt Electricity Usage Monitor
- P3 P4330 Kill-A-Watt(R) Ps 10 Surge Protector

Some examples of office computer loads:

- 19" business monitor: 32W

- Computer with i4770K CPU,
highly efficient Active PFC power supply,
low-end graphics card (just running MS office): 38W
.. adjusted for mid-level graphics card (just running MS office): 70W

APC SMT vs. SMC:
------------------

Some differences between the SMT and SMC models that are not noted elsewhere in this review:

- SMT allows adding optional, alternative NETWORK MANAGEMENT CARDS
- SMT offer greater control over utility/online to AVR transfer points
- SMT has AVR boost and trim, SMC only boost
- SMT has 3 year warranty, SMC 2 years
- SMC has a novice friendly display with big icons (like the CPxxxPFCLCD), SMT has simple LED Text though with much more informative ALERTS
- SMT offers more control and access from LED display buttons, such as sensitivity, voltage thresholds, view logs, outlet groups, self-test, diagnostics, and alarm mute. This makes SMT often a BETTER CHOICE than SMC for Apple Mac users and when no computer being battery powered. SMC buttons allow sensitivity change, alarm mute, and self-test mostly.

CyberPower PRxxxLCD vs. CPxxxPFCLCD:
---------------------------------------

Some differences between these model families that are not already noted elsewhere in this review:

- PR models allow adding optional, alternative NETWORK MANAGEMENT CARDS
- PR models offer much more control directly from the LED display buttons
- PR models offer greater control over AVR to battery transfer points
- PR models offer AVR boost and trim, CPxxxPFCLCD offer boost
- PR models have very informative LED display with words and rotating info and alerts, the CP models have a big novice friendly display with big icons.
- PR models include higher-end management software, Power Panel Business Edition (PPBE). However, you can download it separately and use with the CPxxxPFCLCD models (which include Personal Edition with its super user-friendly GUI), just expect some bugs and unusable features.

BATTERY NOTES:
-----------------

- All the UPS Batteries are expected to last 3-5 YEARS.

- Batteries LEFT IN UPS after they are dead can SWELL UP, making removal more difficult.

- CyberPower allows using THIRD PARTY BATTERIES without voiding the warranty, APC does not.

- APC packaging has a CODE WITH INSTRUCTIONS ON THE BOX giving AN ADDITIONAL YEAR coverage for battery.

SOME THINGS NOT TO PLUG
INTO A UPS OR ON THE SAME
WALL BRANCH CIRCUIT AS ONE:
------------------------------

Hook these up to a separate surge suppressor and preferably to an outlet on another branch circuit (i.e., different circuit box circuit breaker).

- Laserwriter
- Paper shredder
- Copier
- Space heater
- Sump pump
- Dehumidifier
- Most big electrical needy machines

UPS SHUTDOWN AFTER COMPUTER HIBERNATION:
-----------------------------------------------

> Why Shutdown UPS?

There are benefits to auto-shutting down a UPS after it shuts down a PC. By not running a battery way down the UPS can restart without manual help when power returns, battery life improves, and recharge time lessens. Also, a UPS needs to restart in order for a Windows PC to be automatically rebooted after it was shutdown if you wanted that (and if the computer allows it).

> The Scenario

The power returns from a blackout and you want to get back to work, so you start up the computer and while it is starting up or you are starting to work the UPS goes down crashing the computer! (and turning off anything else plugged into it).

What happened? In most user or default configurations the UPS goes down 2-8 minutes or so after the command to shutdown the PC goes out. With some UPS models the UPS will then STILL GO DOWN at a set time after the computer hibernates EVEN IF THE POWER RETURNS.

> Solution

Test if your model does this. If so, find time before UPS shuts down after PC hibernates and TRAIN USERS NOT TO RESTART COMPUTER JUST AFTER BLACKOUT ENDS but instead for that time and to check display for time before UPS shutdown report.

LINE INTERACTIVE vs. DOUBLE CONVERSION
TOPOLOGIES:
------------------------------------------

LINE INTERACTIVE:

These models all have a line interactive topology, this means they go from AC power to battery and back at specific voltages. There is a short transfer time usually 2-8 milliseconds depending on model. Let's now look at the next level up ...

DOUBLE CONVERSION "ONLINE":

- Can TOLERATE greater input fluctuations without impacting output
- ZERO TRANSFER TIME to battery since output runs continuously

- Significantly MORE EXPENSIVE
- Often much NOISIER
- Few % less efficient with electricity

Examples:
- APC Smart-UPS Online model RT 1500VA
APC SMART-UPS RT 1500VA 120V SURTA1500XL
- CyberPower OL Smart App Online model OL1000RTXL2U.
CyberPower Smart App Online OL1000RTXL2U - UPS - 900 Watt - 1000 VA (OL1000RTXL3U) -

HOW TO REBOOT COMPUTER AFTER BLACKOUT:
---------------------------------------------

APC UPS models have an option to bring a Windows PC back up after the blackout ends (assuming the UPS shut it down), and it's an easy configuration option. However, 2 prerequisites are:

- The PC motherboard bios needs hibernate to be enabled
- The UPS needs to have been shutdown (put to sleep is more accurate, it is still "on" if plugged in)

SOME GREEN
QUESTIONS ANSWERED:
-----------------------

WHEN NOTHING PLUGGED INTO UPS:

(a) When not recharging, they all use between 4W-9W.

(b) When recharging, the CyberPower ones use 4W-8W.

(c) When recharging, the APC models use 15W-17W for most of the recharge period. Note that the APC models recharge in up to 3 hours vs. the CyberPower ones taking up to 8 hours.

(d) These UPS models use 1W-3W more when on than when shut-off.

SUGGESTION:
-------------

Given all the UPS units made, comments on Amazon and other sites can't statistically represent a large enough sampling to tell us how likely we are to get a lemon. However comments can give us a great idea WHAT TO TEST FOR just after we get them so we can more quickly check if we have a lemon so we can get an easy exchange.

Some things to test for:
- Is battery recharge under load much slower than claimed
- Runtime with intended load
- Noise under load
- Set up and execute a PC hibernate or other safe shutdown
- Review temperature in logs (APC only)

TO THE MANUFACTURERS:
-------------------------

If you find inaccuracies, please note them in comments and I'll modify accordingly.

CyberPower PR1500LCD Smart App Sinewave UPS 1500VA 1050W SNMP/HTTP Mini-Tower

Buy CyberPower PR1500LCD Smart App Sinewave UPS 1500VA 1050W SNMP/HTTP Mini-Tower

Buy CyberPower PR1500LCD Smart App Sinewave UPS 1500VA 1050W SNMP/HTTP Mini-Tower
Rating: 100% based on 975 ratings. 91 user reviews.

No comments:

Post a Comment