High end UPS for Expensive audio eequipments


Folks,

I just had a sudden power outage while my expensive audiophile system was running.

It really gave me the scare of my life thinking of the aftermath.

Would you folks know of a good protector of high powered amps?

Thanks in advance,

SThekepat

Ag insider logo xs@2xsthekepat
Short of getting an electrical engineering degree or repping one of the major power conditioning companies (w/huge discounts on the entire line), this topic boils down to common sense and exhaustive completeness:
1 - Get a whole-house surge supression device at the electrical panel...something very robust that can take a big spike. An electrician can install it. It's almost certainly better than any local outlet devices
2 - But audiophiles being the OCD creatures we are, go ahead & install any pricey surge suppressors or high end power modification devices you want ahead of the big $$$ gear, paying special attention to line level tube equipment, as someone else here noted
3 - I have a UPS in the home office--it's perfect for desktop computers, which can lose data in a millisecond's outage. But the real solution is a whole house system. Very expensive, but worth it. After the 3rd or 4th extended winter power outage (upstate NY), I finally installed a propane-fired Generac generator w/automatic transfer switch. It's big enough to carry the entire house (20 KW). My home office billing justified the cost and I never looked back
4 - But even with all that, the vulnerability that remains for many is the incoming cable TV or satellite TV wire. Lighting can light up anything attached to those wires, and typically there's no surge protection for those TVs, receivers, or other audio gear--or the surge protection only stands between the power outlets and the gear. There are surge suppression systems that allow cable connection, but that gets tricky w/2-way communication protocols; most people simply disconnect their cable wires at a central location whenever the weather becomes threatening...

@westom

Like everything else in this discussion, your reading is half-baked. UL 1449 includes testing for effectiveness as a surge protection device in addition to life safety issues like not starting fires after a surge. Do some reading before posting.

Series mode surge protection devices have the best (lowest) UL tested "let through voltage" or VPR for test surges. meaning that during tetsting the equipment being protected would suffer a much lower voltage than with MOV parallel devices.

This is why fairly reliable companies such as Furman, SurgeX, and PS Audio rely on them for their best protection, and have NO MOV’s or joule ratings (for AC protection) and have no sacrificial components (in the AC protection).  Again, if you had bothered going through the design, or reading the spec you wrote so eloquently incorrectly about you'd know this.



Best,


Erik
Well the absolutely best buy for price, performance, reliability and pure sine wave output is a professional rather than audiophile type UPS with double conversion.

I have one running my entire system for 3 years 24hr/day without interruption.
There is one caveat. The fans run continuously and cannot be placed in the same room as the equipment due to the noise of the fans.

I run a line from the basement closet under the stairs to my basement home theater and also to the main floor 2 channel sound system.
LOAD capacity 1500 VA / 1350 WATTS - higher power available -
MSRP is US$995 DESCRIPTION
https://www.cyberpowersystems.com/products/ups/smart-app-online/ol1500rtxl2un
Can be purchased at AMAZON for $785
https://www.amazon.com/CyberPower-OL1500RTXL2UN-Online-100-125V-Network/dp/B01DZSSVVI
or in Canada for CDN $850
http://www.directdial.com/OL1500RTXL2U.html

CHEERS,
ROGER