How to calculate if a UPS is sufficient for the requirements

electrical-powerpower-supply-unitups

I am not that of an electricity knowledgable person, so I'll try to put as much info as possible.

I have a Rack Mount UPS of 1800 Watts Model: PRP 3050 RM (in total I have 2 of these – talking about one specifically)

I had to change it's batteries today, and that led me to think if it can support the hardware that are connected to it.

*I will add the specs I was able to find on each manufacturer site with links to PDF's
Currently connected to it are:

  • Netgear 1100 specs out of production
  • QNAP U-859 RP+ specs *no amps indication
  • Dell R610 spec
  • Dell 1950 spec
  • Dell 2850 spec
  • Screen L1710S *minimal screen watts – < 0.5A

I have created on Dell's Power calculator ESSA, a map of the hardware I have:

Map of Rack Tower from Dell ESSA Site

  • Total AMPS used is 5.8
  • All three Dell's each have a redundant PSU
  • according to Dell's site – that means that each PSU uses half of the said/needed Watt's.
  • Each Dell is connected to 2 UPS's (both are PRP 3050 )

Q:

  • My UPS's specs says it has a 8.5Ah – does that mean I can connect more appliances until I reach the MAX?
  • What can I learn from this information that I have provided?

adding link to power calculator that was suggested by @amotzg
http://www.jobsite-generators.com/power_calculators.html

Best Answer

If you have 8.5 Ah and draw 8.5 amps, you can do it for one hour. Conversely you can draw 5.8 Amps for 32% longer or approximately 81 minutes. You should only try to draw 80% of your max rating. Batteries get HOT under 100% load.

I would be nervous about operating so close to the stated maximum wattage of the UPS's. You should upgrade as soon as possible to the next available size (wattage).

The formula for wattage is very simple. It is Volts (electrical pressure) times Amps (electrical current). So a 120 Volt 5 Amp (maximum current draw) device would need a 600 Watt power supply.

What would all of this information provide you? Figure out the total in kilowatts, and then multiply that by the number of hours it is on per day (daily kilowatt hours). Then multiply that by the cost per kilowatt, and you now know what this rack of equipment costs you in electricity every day.

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