Does anyone know what they consider 'affordable'? :)

I recall looking at their gear a while back. Seemed nice, but came with a hefty 
price tag.

Cheers,
Mark

-----Original Message-----
From: AF <[email protected]> On Behalf Of SmarterBroadband
Sent: Friday, 2 July 2021 06:42
To: 'AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group' <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Tower UPS's (again)

https://www.ict-power.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Affordable-DC-Power-for
-Wireless-Broadband-Networks_JAN-2020.pdf


-----Original Message-----
From: AF [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Nate Burke
Sent: Monday, June 28, 2021 9:58 AM
To: Animal Farm <[email protected]>
Subject: [AFMUG] Tower UPS's (again)

We've been using the APC SmartUPS 750XL as a Tower UPS for several years.
Put 2-8 100+AH AGM Batteries on them, and they've been rock solid for us.  I 
can think of only a handful of failures in the dozens deployed over the last 
several years.  I used to source them off ebay for $50-$70 each, but they're 
becoming more and more scarce.  Anybody have a recommendation for a simple UPS 
that will do all the monitoring that the APC does and accept big batteries?

We're a Metro-Rural Area, our power outages are usually measured in Hours, not 
days.  So I'm not as concerned with the inefficiency of doing the DC/AC/DC 
Conversion for Runtime, just power stability during 
outages/fluctuations.    I like the ease of connecting the external 
batteries to the APC, since the XL line has an Anderson plug on the back for 
them, and has a larger charger than the normal UPS, so recharge times are very 
quick.

When the boss goes to the WISPA Shows, his head is filled with all kids of 
ideas, so he want's me to investigate doing everything as a DC Plant, When I 
price that out, with chargers, voltage converters (24/48), inverters, fuse 
protection, LVD, Monitoring, etc, it always seems like the price is a couple 
hundred dollars of parts and it would be cobbled together.

Am I missing something with doing a DC Plant?  I see the telco's at the sites 
using a rackmount rectifier with power supply modules, but those are a several 
hundred by themselves, and they are only 48V, they don't have to worry about 
24v radios.  When I build a site now, I drop in 2 batteries, and the APC, and 
the site is up and running in a couple minutes.  A DIN rail with a couple power 
supplies and the box is done, and has fully monitored power, and I can plug in 
whatever I want without any equipment modifications.

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