The first explanation doesn't make sense, the second is more likely.  Or just 
coincidence.

So you need to rotate your batteries?


-----Original Message-----
From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of George Skorup
Sent: Thursday, December 8, 2016 9:55 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [AFMUG] another battery question

I've got a Tripp Lite 2U UPS that recently needed new batteries. They have two 
internal 48v strings. 4x 12v 5Ah per string. Ordered completely OEM replacement 
string, threw them in, everything is fine.

The old ones however would cause the UPS to shut down instantly when AC was 
lost. I figured I'd find one bad 12v battery pulling the whole thing down. No, 
instead each string had one bad battery. What's odd is that the two bad ones 
were both at the "end" of the strings. The other six tested fine.

I've seen this multiple times now on different stuff. If all of them aren't 
bad, it's always the battery at the end. I've noticed this on 24 and 48v 
systems. My question is why? Is that battery taking the brunt of the surge 
current upon transfers?

The other thought I had with this Tripp Lite thing is that both of those 
batteries were probably the closest to the heat generating components, 
inverter, etc.


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