Battery Backup (UPS) - Showing 601 - 624 of 1046 Products

Filter (0)
TRIPP LITE INTERNET350U 3UPS/Surge 3 Surge UPS System
$84 .80
Free Shipping
Liebert GXT5-3000LVRT2UXLN GXT5 3000VA 120V UPS with SNMP/Webcard - 2U Rack/Tower ...
$4,352 .51
Free Shipping
TRIPP LITE SU3000RTXLCD2U SmartOnline SU3000RTXLCD2U 3000VA Tower/Rack ...
$2,598 .45
Free Shipping
$2,598 .45
Sold by: IPC Store
APC SMC1500-2UC 1440 VA 900 Watts 6 Outlets Pure Sinewave Smart-UPS with ...
$871 .63
APC BE650G 650 VA 390 Watts 8 Outlets UPS
$127 .85
Free Shipping
Vertiv Liebert Power Module APS5KPWRMOD1
$4,297 .67
Tripp Lite series SmartPro 1000VA 1000W 120V Line-Interactive Sine Wave UPS - 8 Outlets, ...
$1,265 .71
Eaton 9PX1000GRT 1000 VA 900 Watts 8 Outlets Tower / Rack Mountable UPS
$1,221 .89
Liebert PSI5 UPS - 1440VA 1350W 120V Line Interactive AVR Mini Tower UPS, 0.9 Power Factor ...
$624 .54
APC BVK950M2 Back UPS, 950VA/480W, Tower, 120V, 6x NEMA 5-15R outlets, USB Type A + C ...
$178 .69
TRENDnet TI-S15052, 150W, 52V DC, 2.89A AC to DC DIN-Rail Power Supply with PFC Function
$89 .99
Free Shipping
APC Smart-UPS SMT3000RMI2UC 3.0 kVA 2.7 KWatts 12 Outlets 3000VA LCD RM 2U 230V with ...
$2,484 .97
Tripp Lite SMART1500RT1U 1500VA Rack/Tower UPS 1U Rack/Tower - AVR - 2 Minute ...
$1,088 .91
1500 VA Eaton 9SX 208V Tower UPS
$1,633 .79
CyberPower TAA Compliant CP1500PFCLCDTAA UPS 1500VA 900W PFC Compatible Pure ...
$309 .95
Free Shipping
SMARTPRO UPS, LITHIUM BATTERY BACKUP - 120V 1KVA LINE INTERACTIVE, 2U, SINE WAVE
$1,615 .97
EATON 5SC750G 750 VA 525 W 6 Outlets UPS
$484 .95
APC BN450M UPS 450VA, 120V, 6 NEMA outlets (2 surge), Battery is not user replaceable - 8 ...
$55 .99
Free Shipping
$55 .99
Sold by: Neworld
Eaton 9PX 9PX2000RT-L - UPS (rack-mountable / external) - AC 100/110/120/125 V - 1800 ...
$2,941 .45
Minuteman ETR550LG 550VA/330 Watts, 120 VAC, (4)NEMA 5-15 On-battery receptacles, ...
$163 .72
ADTRAN INC. 1175044L1 RACKMOUNTORWALLMOUNTBATTERYBACKUP(L1)
$336 .38
Free Shipping

What is an Uninterruptible Power Supply?

Your organization can function without utilizing uninterruptible power supplies (UPS), but it is far from ideal. A UPS can protect your organization’s computer workstations and other electronic equipment from spikes in power, supply power during brief outages, and allow for time to safely power down computers in long outages. A UPS can be considered to be a type of insurance policy for computers and electronic equipment.

What Does a UPS Do?

Consider the following situation if you do not have UPSs deployed in your organization. During a heavy storm, lightning strikes and causes a black out. You don’t know how long it will last, your staff just lost all of their unsaved work, and electronic equipment may have been damaged. If your organization utilized uninterruptible power supplies throughout critical areas, your staff would have been able to save their work, safely power down their workstations, and your equipment would have been surge protected.

In addition to allowing your staff save their work and safely power down their desktops, a UPS can also defend against surges and under-voltage. However, they are not power generators that can power your organization’s workstations through extended periods of downtime. Rather, they keep your equipment powered and running while backup power generators – if you have them – start up and begin supplying power.

Considerations

If the above information about the benefits UPSs is something that your organization finds intriguing and would like to utilize them throughout its locations, then here are some considerations for selecting the ideal UPS.

Types of Uninterruptible Power Supplies

There are three main types of power supplies, differentiated by what they do and how much they cost.

  • Stand-by UPS – The most basic type and lowest cost UPS, a stand-by UPS is essentially a backup battery that can supply power when it notices that the outlet has stopped providing it or isn’t providing enough. When the outlet supplies power normally, the UPS charges the battery to capacity.
  • Line-Interactive UPS – A line-interactive uninterruptible power supply is a step up from a stand-by unit and features a built-in transformer that can moderate some voltage fluctuations. While a stand-by UPS is very useful for power outages, it is not designed to deal with small fluctuations in power.
  • Online UPS – An online UPS is the most expensive option, but is the one that offers the most functionality. While stand-by and line-interactive UPSs are inactive while power is supplied regularly, an online UPS always modifies the power from the wall. It acts as an intermediary that is always moderating power so that it can smooth out even the tiniest of fluctuations. Online UPSs also tend to have larger batteries than the either stand-by or line-interactive UPSs. These are ideal for datacenters that employ equipment such as server systems and other costly equipment.
Wattage

Ensure that the UPS provides sufficient power for the equipment that will be connected to it. Add up the total wattage of all the equipment that will be connected to the UPS, and try to find one that provides several minutes of power for that amount of wattage. For example, if you calculate that your equipment uses a total of 500 watts, find a UPS that can supply 500 watts for several minutes and not a UPS that can supply 500 watts but only for a few seconds.

Outlets

Try to find a UPS with sufficient amount of outlets for your equipment. Be careful when looking at the numbers however, as not all outlets on an UPS may be powered by the backup battery. For example, a UPS with six outlets may only supply power from the backup battery to three outlets while the other three are just surge protected.

Operating System Compatibility

Some UPSs have the capability to alert your staff through their workstations when there is a power outage that they should save all work and safely shut down their computers.

 

Final Words

Utilizing uninterruptible power supplies throughout your organization is something that is prudent, much like insurance policies. Lost work and damaged equipment can cost your organization much more than the initial costs of the uninterruptible power supplies.

 

By NeweggBusiness Staff