I wish everything would happily run on 29 volts like the Cambium stuff.

Phoenix Contact has some DIN rail UPS gear that puts out regulated 24V when on 
commercial power, but raw battery voltage when on batteries.  So what good is 
that?


From: Bill Prince 
Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2015 9:51 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] 24V UPS

Yes, there is temp compensation, but not that important to me with the sites 
we're putting it in.  The load is isolated from the batteries, which is why it 
can do multi-stage charging (recovery/boost/float).  However, based on the 
literature, the load voltage will follow the battery voltage.  We do use a 
Traco to knock that down to 24V for some devices like MT and UBNT.

So I am trying these out.  Will let the group know after I have some experience 
with them.


bp
<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>

On 1/6/2015 7:56 PM, George Skorup (Cyber Broadcasting) wrote:

  What about temperature compensation? And is the output regulated or is it 
essentially parallel operation and you get battery float voltage? I went with 
the Traco because the temperature compensation is one thing that I absolutely 
need. And I can handle the unregulated voltage with an RSD. For smaller 
sites/micro POPs, now I'm just throwing in Mean Well AD-155's. No temp. comp. 
but I'm not all that worried about those because they're not supporting 
hundreds of $$ worth of batteries that I'd like to last. So far they have not 
severely overcharged batteries like the APC UPS's do in only a few months, so 
I'm happy with that.

  On 1/6/2015 5:04 PM, Bill Prince wrote:

    We just got a couple of the 24V versions and it was only $300 each.  About 
the same as the Traco for the two separate units.  I sure appreciate the 
differences, but I was looking for extra-small form factor on a DIN rail.  
Because this site is on AC power 99.99% of the time, it's not a big deal (to 
me) if it takes 24 or even 48 hours to get a full charge.  IIRC, these units 
also have LVD.


bp
<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>

On 1/6/2015 10:26 AM, George Skorup (Cyber Broadcasting) wrote:

      Those are really expensive. A Traco TSP+BCM is several hundred less at 
almost every wattage, last time I looked anyway. I like the split power supply 
and battery module. A lot cheaper to replace a failed component than an entire 
$700-1k all-in-one. But that's just me. The Traco gets you temperature 
compensated charging and LVD. You get contacts for DC input OK, batt OK/fail, 
etc. Hook that up to a SiteMonitor switch closure module and you have pretty 
good remote visibility. Put shunts wherever you want to monitor, battery 
charge/discharge current, output rail current, etc.

      On 1/6/2015 10:49 AM, Bill Prince wrote:

        Try these.  We are about to install a couple of them.  Some models have 
ethernet ports for a GUI (no SNMP :-( ).  But they do have contacts to send 
alerts through a SiteMonitor (for example).

        http://www.altechcorp.com/power/CBI-UPS.html


        On Tue, Jan 6, 2015 at 8:23 AM, Christopher Tyler 
<[email protected]> wrote:

          I'm at my end. I've been looking at this for a while now and it's 
obvious that no one makes an industrial APC UPS that works.

          We've tried the Alpha Cordex (DIN rail) and the ICT (19" rack) and 
neither one can do what a APC management card can. We just need it to provide 
24vDC to a load and when the AC power goes out, send an alert and let us 
monitor the system status via SNMP.

          Alpha:
          PROS: DIN rail mounted
          CONS: Web interface is IE only, SNMP requests are completely broken, 
have not tested SNMP traps, cost is about $700.

          ICT:
          PROS: It works well as a dumb power supply/charger with UPS 
functionality, web interface works in all browsers.
          CONS: SNMP is limited to about 6 values, all remote communication is 
lost when AC is removed, no battery monitoring at all other than the voltage 
for use with LV cutoff which is one of the values that is not available via 
SNMP. Also costs about $700

          I have to give it to Alpha at this point, at least their unit remains 
"intelligent" when AC power is removed. If they would fix their web interface 
and SNMP it would be perfect.

          So... Does anyone have a solution that works that isn't completely 
cobbled together? I need to know when we lose/regain AC power, that the battery 
is draining, what the battery voltage is so that I know when it's about to cut 
off, it needs a LV cut off to protect the batteries, and all this information 
needs to be available via SNMP and web. Am I asking for too much or does 
something of this nature exist outside of TrippLite and APC?

          --
          Christopher Tyler
          MTCRE/MTCNA/MTCTCE/MTCWE
          Total Highspeed Internet Services
          417.851.1107





        -- 

        --

        bp

        part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com








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