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(Posted and emailed.) On Tue, 2002-12-31 at 08:57, Billy SG McCarthy wrote: > My parents have a fairly old house, such that there is > only 1 outlet in the room where they have 2 computers > (and some lights, etc). The computers are never both > running at the same time, but it still makes me a bit > uneasy, 2 full power strips, 1 plugged into the other. > > > I was thinking they should get a UPS and plug > everything into that. Does this make sense? If it > does, how powerful a UPS should they get? If not, any > suggestions aside from getting an electrician to put > in more plugs? Short answer: If your parents actually have a power problem, then getting a UPS is unlikely to solve it. The number of plugs and power strips doesn't strictly matter; what matters is the amount of current going through the power strip and then through the circuit breaker in the house. For example, if you turn on a 100-watt bulb, that will draw about 0.83 amperes (100 W / 120 V) of current. The wiring inside your walls, and therefore your circuit breaker or fuse, can take up to 15 amperes. A power strip or extension cord will probably take less than that: look for a label or tag with the number. So you need to add up the maximum amperage of all the things that are plugged into each power strip (for example, the AC converter on the laptop that I'm using now is labeled "1.5 A"), *including other power strips*, and make sure that the sum isn't greater than what the power strip can take. If it's too high, and your power strip has some kind of circuit breaker, then it will trip the circuit breaker when too many things are turned on at once. Then find out what outlets are connected to the same circuit breaker as the power strips, find out the sum of the amperages of everything that is plugged into all those outlets, and make sure that the sum isn't over 15 A. If it's too high, then you risk tripping the circuit breaker of your house when too many things are turned on at once. If everything is running within those limits, then your parents don't need a UPS (although they do need a good surge protector). If you do have too much current going through one place, then a UPS will buy your parents time while they turn things off, but it won't fix the real problem, which is that too many things are plugged into the same circuit. Even if an electrician adds more outlets to the room, if those outlets are all connected to the same circuit breaker, it still won't fix the real problem. > > Kindly yours, > Billy S G McCarthy > > __________________________________________________ > Do you Yahoo!? > Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now. > http://mailplus.yahoo.com > _______________________________________________ > Discuss mailing list > Discuss at blu.org > http://www.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss -- "Computer security policy is expressed in a language such as Spanish or English or Japanese." --Rita C. Summers, _Secure Computing_ // seth gordon // sethg at ropine.com // http://ropine.com/sethg/cv.html //
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