I am not an EE - most of what I know about this stuff I learned working power issues on my sailboat. Inverters, batteries, alternators and 110. It is an unholy brew.
I understand what you are trying to do. I believe APC has done it for you.
BUT If you would rather roll your own (heck that is half the fun) then I suggest you just hook it up and see what happens.
Your comment that you can't power up your whole system without blowing the UPS suggests that the only thing you can do is to get a much bigger UPS - in the 2-3K watts range as you might find in corporate server environment. Perhaps the larger reserves will also help with any potential current limiting.
Please keep in mind that you are getting into the land of batteries - lots of juice costs lots of money, takes lots of space, maintenance etc. I am looking at the APC site and to get to 3375W they are using 208 in. The unit - without shipping or install is $3,350... Typical back-up time at full load is 6.4 minutes (no typo six point four).
http://www.apc.com/resource/include/techspec_index.cfm
One could come to the conclusion that the reason this product doesn't exist is because there is no real return on investment. Frankly it would be a lot less expensive and considerably more sonically effective to just run a couple of dedicated 20amp lines to your listening area.
I understand what you are trying to do. I believe APC has done it for you.
BUT If you would rather roll your own (heck that is half the fun) then I suggest you just hook it up and see what happens.
Your comment that you can't power up your whole system without blowing the UPS suggests that the only thing you can do is to get a much bigger UPS - in the 2-3K watts range as you might find in corporate server environment. Perhaps the larger reserves will also help with any potential current limiting.
Please keep in mind that you are getting into the land of batteries - lots of juice costs lots of money, takes lots of space, maintenance etc. I am looking at the APC site and to get to 3375W they are using 208 in. The unit - without shipping or install is $3,350... Typical back-up time at full load is 6.4 minutes (no typo six point four).
http://www.apc.com/resource/include/techspec_index.cfm
One could come to the conclusion that the reason this product doesn't exist is because there is no real return on investment. Frankly it would be a lot less expensive and considerably more sonically effective to just run a couple of dedicated 20amp lines to your listening area.