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- Larry
daparnin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
--
This goes back a few years, but isn't Ohm's Law only applicicable to DC, not AC. Hence, they came up with volt-amps as a means of expressing the power requirements. I sat through an American Power seminar 10 or 12 years ago where they explain what it was all about. Unfortunately, you use it or loose it. ...and I'm loosing it (along with some of my hair).
Dave Parnin Nishikawa Standard Company Topeka, IN 46571 daparnin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
UPS' have ratings of vA (volt-amps). These seem similar to watts - remember
PIE (Ohm's Law)? P = I x E (P = power in watts, I = current in amps, E =
voltage in volts). It may not be completely accurate, but I find the load
for each unit attached to the UPS - it's usually on a label in back. Add'm
up. You probably want to worry about peak vs. average. I'm sure others have
more info, and the manuals (perish the thought of RTFM) have guidelines for
all this.
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