Monday, November 11, 2013

Buy CyberPower PR5000LCDRTXL5U Smart App Sinewave UPS 5000VA 4000W LCD Rack/Tower

Smart App Series - PR5000LCDRTXL5U - Cyber Power Systems
The CyberPower Smart App Sinewave PR5000LCDRTXL5U uninterruptible power supply (UPS) safeguards mission-critical servers, telecom equipment, VoIP and internetworking
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Buy CyberPower PR5000LCDRTXL5U Smart App Sinewave UPS 5000VA 4000W LCD Rack/Tower

CyberPower PR5000LCDRTXL5U Smart App Sinewave UPS 5000VA 4000W LCD Rack/Tower

Price : Check It Here Special Price Buy CyberPower PR5000LCDRTXL5U Smart App Sinewave UPS 5000VA 4000W LCD Rack/Tower
Code : B003N6WF2O
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Product Feature


  • 5000VA/4000 Watts - GreenPower UPS
  • Pure Sinewave, Line-Interactive, AVR
  • Intelligent LCD Diagnostics
  • SNMP/HTTP, 5U Rack/Tower, 5 Outlets
  • Extended runtime capable with optional BPL48V75ART2U Battery Packs
  • 5000VA / 4000 Watts - Green Power UPS
  • HTTP, 5U Rack/Tower, 5 Outlets

Product Description


The CyberPower Smart App Sinewave PR5000LCDRTXL5U uninterruptible power supply (UPS) safeguards mission-critical servers, telecom equipment, VoIP and internetworking hardware that require seamless pure sine wave power. Its full automatic voltage regulation (AVR) boost/buck technology 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 PR5000LCDRTXL5U unit has a capacity of 5000VA/4000Watts, five (5) battery and surge-protected receptacles, including three (3) NEMA L6-30R twist lock receptacles and two (2) fail-safe NEMA L6-20R twist lock receptacles for critical loads. This UPS has sixteen (16) maintenance-free, user-replaceable 12V/9Ah batteries. The rotatable front LCD panel displays all major UPS vitals for ease of use. This unit offers connectivity via one (1) HID USB, two (2) DB9 serial and one (1) emergency power off (EPO) port. Protection for phone/network (RJ11/RJ45) is included. 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 software for unsurpassed flexibility and control. An optional SNMP / HTTP Remote Management adapter (RMCARD202) supports remote management and control of the PR5000LCDRTXL2U 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 $300,000 Connected Equipment Guarantee. The PR5000LCDRTXL5U allows for the addition of up to ten (10) BPL48V75ART2U external battery packs to increase the runtime of the unit. The battery packs are easy to plug-in and can be "hot-swapped" to maintain system uptime during normal UPS maintenance. This unit requires a 208-240V 30A NEMA L6-30R receptacle.


Product Detail


  • Color: Black
  • Brand: CyberPower
  • Model: PR5000LCDRTXL5U
  • Original language:English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.75" h x17.00" w x24.25" l,222.00 pounds




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Product Reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
5Pre and post-install review
By DH
Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R3HDPJ5VW4J61L I ordered one of these units as it has a much better price/capacity ratio than similar units from APC and Tripplite. Additionally, thanks to Amazon Prime, shipping was free so even though the unit itself may be priced a little lower on other websites, once you factor shipping in, Amazon was a couple hundred lower. Here's my pre-install notes:

It does not include network management in the base price, you have to add it in, which is surprising for a system in this size range but it's still cheaper even if you need to purchase that add-on card.

Next, a word of warning, this is a very heavy system. It ships strapped to a wood pallet, and overall, with unit plus packaging it easily weighs in the 350 pound range. I mention this for several reasons:

1) When racking it, you'll want to take the batteries out and get two strong people to load it into the rack because even without the batteries the base chassis weighs about 180 pounds. The two battery modules are about 70 pounds each.

2) When re-inserting the batteries, do NOT force them, slam them, etc. If everything is aligned properly, they will slide into place in their connectors with little effort. If you meet an obstruction, something is wrong.

3) My initial unit was delivered by a company called CEVA in a van with two men. The van did not have a lift gate and pallet jack even though the side of the unit clearly says to lift that way, and of course it's on a pallet. It was just them and a hand truck. As they're trying to slide the thing out the side of the van 'carefully' which is really kind of impossible when you're talking about a 350 pound square object that you're trying to slide since you can't lift it properly, they of course drop it right onto the ground on its side. I said well bring it in anyway and we'll see how it looks. Externally it looked fine but we had to remove the battery packs to make it light enough to life into the rack and when trying to add the packs back in they wouldn't go. Turns out when they dropped it the battery packs bent some internal brackets and also frayed one of the power cables so we're actually pretty lucky it didn't fit back in because it would have grounded out a bunch of very powerful batteries.

So, with that being said, please be careful to watch whomever delivers it from the time they arrive until its in your possession to make sure it does not get dropped. They will most likely request a phone call with you in advance; make sure to insist that they deliver it on a truck that has a lift gate. Inspect it carefully for external box damage upon arrival. If there is any hint of damage, make the delivery folks write a very detailed note on your copy of the invoice about it, or simply reject the shipment. You may even want to pop the top off regardless just to make sure the wiring looks fine because they're strapped in there pretty tightly and if the unit was dropped at all before it got to you, it's possible the wires got pinched, which would be bad when you apply power.

In our case the CEVA delivery guy must have been down the dropping customer deliveries road before and I was too trusting; I asked him to note on the invoice that it had been dropped by them after I had signed it. Turns out he had something between the top copy of the invoice and the tear out one they give me, so he writes what I requested on top, tears out (and folds) my copy and hands it to me and I didn't think to open it up and make sure the carbon copy had pressed through, which it had for everything but the note that it had been dropped. Lesson learned. Fortunately Amazon has been helpful regardless of that and is replacing it; I just hope they get their money back from CEVA since it's not CyberPower's or Amazon's fault the damage occurred so neither of them should have to lose money.

Post-install review. So I got the thing all hooked up and ready for action, plugged in, a brief flash of blue light comes from the LCD panel on the front and then nothing. There is an on/off switch and a status button on the front; that's it. I cycled it on and off a few times, nothing. Manual makes no mention of this phenomenon, only a brief note that you should charge the unit for at least eight hours before connecting equipment to it. Well, as I start to dig around online for the number for Cyberpower, it suddenly powers on (the switch was left in the on position). Apparently from an unplugged and off status, there's a few minutes of time that needs to pass before it powers on; perhaps a diagnostic check. This has since been confirmed by way of a second unit we ordered that did the same thing.

Once on, it gives you pretty useful information on the panel. Input voltage, output voltage, current draw, battery status, run time at current load if it were to switch to battery, temperature, etc. We have two 2-cpu servers, an eight-disk iSCSI array, a Brocade MLXe 400 router with a few blades and two 48-port switches connected to it; with that load, it still only shows about 18% of capacity and something like an estimated 2.5 hour run time. It's a big beast of a unit compared to smaller 2000 and 3000va UPS's. Have had some brief outages so far with no issues switching to and from battery, but nothing long term to see if it really delivers on the run time estimate.

I'll update in a few months if anything useful to report surfaces. So far, it seems like a very good value compared to the alternative big name brands.

CyberPower PR5000LCDRTXL5U Smart App Sinewave UPS 5000VA 4000W LCD Rack/Tower

Buy CyberPower PR5000LCDRTXL5U Smart App Sinewave UPS 5000VA 4000W LCD Rack/Tower

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