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Here's another reminder not to skimp on that PSU and to purchase one from a recognizable, reputable brand.
See full article...
See full article...
When you're just starting out or otherwise broke and have to build sometimes you sort by cheapest price.. That's unfortunate.
I will say this though. IF you need to run cheap hardware save yourself some headaches and put it all on a line conditioning UPS. YEa you'll buy a UPS, but even cheap hardware will perform longer and better on clean power.
Huh... I wonder if there is an article there. "Lind conditioned power, compared to wall Power" Does the condition of a watt matter to your Power supply and system?
A decent power supply is less expensive and much easier to find than a high-quality UPS. It wouldn't take long for me to select a PC power supply of reasonable quality, whereas choosing a UPS for home/office that I would trust would take considerable research. I've never found one that checked the right boxes. Is there a site(s) that does good reviews of power protection equipment?When you're just starting out or otherwise broke and have to build sometimes you sort by cheapest price.. That's unfortunate.
I will say this though. IF you need to run cheap hardware save yourself some headaches and put it all on a line conditioning UPS. YEa you'll buy a UPS, but even cheap hardware will perform longer and better on clean power.
Yeah, I agree with this. Plus there is the consideration if you are on a budget than running power through an UPS will increase the electricity bill, unless you have an UPS with a bypass mode, but then it offers no protection for low quality electricity.A decent power supply is less expensive and much easier to find than a high-quality UPS.
Must be as essential as a gaming router.Oh my.... I just discovered that one can now buy a "Gaming UPS". I hope that none of you have been careless enough to play video games while connected to an ordinary non-gaming UPS!
Not sure if it’s common in Europe, but in the US nearly all UPSes are “bypass” and run what it called “line-interactive” so they can still provide protection. They kick into protected mode only when they detect poor quality line power - and that would be the only time they consume fractionally more electricity than not having one.Plus there is the consideration if you are on a budget than running power through an UPS will increase the electricity bill, unless you have an UPS with a bypass mode, but then it offers no protection for low quality electricity.
Yeah, but when they run line interactive mode they aren't smoothing out the power, so shorter irregularities aren't corrected, which would be part of the point if you buy a UPS to make your equipment last longer.Not sure if it’s common in Europe, but in the US nearly all UPSes are “bypass” and run what it called “line-interactive” so they can still provide protection. They kick into protected mode only when they detect poor quality line power - and that would be the only time they consume fractionally more electricity than not having one.
The don’t filter if it’s not needed. But they can detect an issue and switch to filtering in a fraction of a second. Unless your power is so bad it just filters all the time - then you have bigger issues and an actual double conversion unit, efficiency be damned, would be better. That may be the case in some off grid or third world situations - maybe some extremely rural or underserved areas. But most places hooked up to a larger grid - they stay mostly stable just by virtue of their sizeYeah, but when they run line interactive mode they aren't smoothing out the power, so shorter irregularities aren't corrected, which would be part of the point if you buy a UPS to make your equipment last longer.