cellio: (avatar)
Monica ([personal profile] cellio) wrote2010-10-03 09:41 pm
Entry tags:

need...more...power

When I came home from work on erev Sukkot I was greeted by the plaintive wail of a UPS that had lost its will to live (thank you thank you thank you for not doing that 12 hours later!). There was nothing to be done then but unplug things. After Shabbat I replaced it; while I briefly considered just ordering a new battery, I noted that I was using all outlets on the UPS and all the wall outlets and was still resorting to a power squid, and on a recent power outage the UPS hadn't really held up very long. I was asking it to do too much; time for a bigger one. (And anyway, I didn't want my equipment to be unprotected for the several more days it would take for a new battery to arrive.)

This is as orderly as these things get:

Re: ...compulsion...too...strong...resistance...is...useless....

[identity profile] dragonazure.livejournal.com 2010-10-05 01:30 am (UTC)(link)
It just looks scary in the picture. If things are mostly on standby, its probably OK. I was considering all the fire safety lectures we get every holiday season about overloading the circuits with too many lights--but I think that was from the days when light strings were made of incandescent bulbs....

Offhand, I can't quote you what is considered "safe". It has to do with the current your household wiring is rated for, and that is going to be based on the age of your house and the electrical codes (if any) that were in place when it was built or last renovated.

Getting the UPS up off the floor is a great idea.