Hi Darin,

If you want to chat off list I can tell you about our experience with this set 
up.   We are a fellow Minnesota WISP and have had great luck with this set up.

SDR
DR-UPS 40
TPDIN Web2

The charging has definitely not been a problem.  We run a heater and a fan 
anyway in the cabinet.   Everything is DC except Fan and Heater.   Has been in 
the field over a year and working really well.  Only issue is you need 24V, but 
putting two batteries in hasn’t been an issue.

With this we are able to:

  1.  Use TPDIN and relays to turn on fan and heater automatically
  2.  Have UPS
  3.  Use relays on TPDIN to reboot Netonix
  4.  Monitor voltage on battteries, Netonix
  5.  Monitor current on batteries and Netonix
  6.  Use Netonix to POE everything in the cabinet
  7.  SNMP monitor the whole setup

It works really well.   I think Sitemonitor can do most of this, we just don’t 
have experience with that.

Thanks,

David Coudron

From: Af <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Darin Steffl
Sent: Tuesday, April 3, 2018 4:11 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Traco BCMU360 24 or 48v

The one thing that worries me about using the DR-UPS40 is that it doesn't have 
temperature controlled charging like BCMU does. So we would have to set one 
charging voltage that is static which will be under voltage in the winter and 
over voltage cooking the batteries in the summer when the box is hot. We don't 
heat or cool our boxes so I was looking for something with a little more 
control of the float voltage with the temperature differences we have. I also 
would like to only use one battery instead of two.



On Tue, Apr 3, 2018 at 4:06 PM, Mathew Howard 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I'm the Netonix would be doing any voltage up/down conversion you'd need to do 
in that setup anyway, so I don't really see much advantage to 24v vs 48v one 
way or the other.
In a setup like that, I'd personally just use the Meanwell SDR-240-24 with a 
Meanwell DR-UPS40, and do 24v batteries, instead of using the BCMU-360. You 
need two batteries instead of one then, but it's cheaper and doesn't have the 
issues Paul mentioned.
I don't have any experience with the Tycon webmonitor, but I definitely can 
recommend using a SiteMonitor.

On Tue, Apr 3, 2018 at 3:52 PM, Paul McCall 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Be aware that the BCMU-360 does the following:

Only sustains at 240w
Only outputs about 45v when running on batteries.  We have started using a step 
up kit to bring it back to 48v+

Paul

From: Af <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> On Behalf Of Darin 
Steffl
Sent: Tuesday, April 3, 2018 4:50 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>; 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [AFMUG] Traco BCMU360 24 or 48v

Hey guys,

We're looking at fine tuning our DC power solution for sites using more than 
75w of power.

We're setting in with using the Traco BCMU-360 with a Meanwell SDR-240-24 or 48 
volts power supply.

If we're using the Traco UPS unit, is there any advantage to using 24v vs 48v 
power supply? It will only be powering a Netonix DC switch and the BCMU only 
needs a 12v battery.

Also, we're looking at SiteMonitor to monitor the battery voltage and grid 
power as well. Do you recommend this or the Tycon webmonitor (TPDIN)?

Thanks

--
Darin Steffl
Minnesota WiFi
www.mnwifi.com<http://www.mnwifi.com/>
507-634-WiFi
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--
Darin Steffl
Minnesota WiFi
www.mnwifi.com<http://www.mnwifi.com/>
507-634-WiFi
[http://www.snoitulosten.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/facebook-small.jpg]<http://www.facebook.com/minnesotawifi>
 Like us on Facebook<http://www.facebook.com/minnesotawifi>

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