top of page

UPS Systems Sales & Services

 

 

Data Center UPS Systems from Toshiba
Power Equipment Services
SYSTAT sells and services every make and model of both new and legacy UPS system in California and Arizona. Visit Our Markets HERE
PRODUCTS
SERVICES
Please reload

Please reload

Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS)

                                                                       

                                                                      An uninterruptible power supply (UPS) is an electrical apparatus that provides emergency power 

                                                                      to a load, when the input power source, typically mainspower, fails. 

                                                                      A UPS provides near-instanteneous protection from input power interruptions, by supplying energy 

                                                                      stored in batteries, supercapacitors, or fly-wheels. The on-battery runtime of most UPS's is relatively

                                                                      short but sufficient enough to start a standby power source or properly shut down the protected

                                                                      equipment.  

 

                                                                      A UPS is typically used to protect hardware such as computers, data centers, telecommunication 

                                                                      equipment or other electrical equipment where an unexpected power disruption could cause injuries,

                                                                      fatalities, serious business disruption or data loss. UPS units range in size from units designed to protect

                                                                      a single computer without a video monitor (around 200 volt-ampere rating) to large units powering

                                                                      entire data centers or buildings.        

 

Online/Double-Conversion

 

In an online UPS, the batteries are always connected to the inverter, so that no power transfer switches are necessary. When power loss occurs, the rectifier simply drops out of the circuit and the batteries keep the power steady and unchanged. When power is restored, the rectifier resumes carrying most of the load and begins charging the batteries, though the charging current may be limited to prevent the high-power rectifier from overheating the batteries and boiling off the electrolyte. The main advantage of an on-line UPS is its ability to provide an "electrical firewall" between the incoming utility power and sensitive electronic equipment.

 

The online UPS is ideal for environments where electrical isolation is necessary or for equipment that is very sensitive to power fluctuations. Although once previously reserved for very large installations of 10 kW or more, advances in technology have now permitted it to be available as a common consumer device, supplying 500 W or less. The initial cost of the online UPS may be higher, but its total cost of ownership is generally lower due to longer battery life. The online UPS may be necessary when the power environment is "noisy", when utility power sags, outages and other anomalies are frequent, when protection of sensitive IT equipment loads is required, or when operation from an extended-run backup generator is necessary.

 

The basic technology of the online UPS is the same as in a standby or line-interactive UPS. However it typically costs much more, due to it having a much greater current AC-to-DC battery-charger/rectifier, and with the rectifier and inverter designed to run continuously with improved cooling systems. It is called a double-conversion UPS due to the rectifier directly driving the inverter, even when powered from normal AC current.

                                                                         

Offline / Standby

 

The offline/standby UPS (SPS) offers only the most basic features, providing surge protection and battery backup. The protected equipment is normally connected directly to incoming utility power. When the incoming voltage falls below or rises above a predetermined level the SPS turns on its internal DC-AC inverter circuitry, which is powered from an internal storage battery. The UPS then mechanically switches the connected equipment on to its DC-AC inverter output. The switchover time can be as long as 25 milliseconds depending on the amount of time it takes the standby UPS to detect the lost utility voltage. The UPS will be designed to power certain equipment, such as a personal computer, without any objectionable dip or brownout to that device.

 

Line-interactive

 

The line-interactive UPS is similar in operation to a standby UPS, but with the addition of a multi-tap variable-voltage autotransformer. This is a special type of transformer that can add or subtract powered coils of wire, thereby increasing or decreasing the magnetic field and the output voltage of the transformer. This is also known as a Buck–boost transformer.

 

This type of UPS is able to tolerate continuous undervoltage brownouts and overvoltage surges without consuming the limited reserve battery power. It instead compensates by automatically selecting different power taps on the autotransformer. Depending on the design, changing the autotransformer tap can cause a very brief output power disruption,[5] which may cause UPSs equipped with a power-loss alarm to "chirp" for a moment.

 

 

                                                                          

SYSTAT represents the best manufacturers of UPS Systems.
bottom of page