Upcoming Power Outage- suggestions?

Okay these are all great suggestions, but lets say worst case scenario, you are out of town what kind of power back up solution do you recommend then?

Or say you are stuck at work and you wont be home for 8 hours. You know something like this.

Thanks.
 
Okay so I saw the suggestion for using 2 ups units. What would be powerful enough to run a quite one 230gph return pump and a 250watt heater for say max 4 days. This would need to come on automatically in the event of a power outage, as I may not be here.

Thanks.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7639691#post7639691 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by 10" Red Devil
Okay so I saw the suggestion for using 2 ups units. What would be powerful enough to run a quite one 230gph return pump and a 250watt heater for say max 4 days. This would need to come on automatically in the event of a power outage, as I may not be here.

Thanks.

Nothing you'd want to shell out the $$$ for. A typical UPS is designed to run a computer/monitor for maybe 15-30 minutes to give you time to save what you're doing and shut down. Run a smaller load and you can get more time. Forget about the heater, 250w would run down a UPS very quickly. Maybe 1-2 hours tops, certainly not 4 days.

That's not to say UPS's aren't a good idea. I have an 1100VA model from APC (~$125) on my tank, and it has served me extremely well. It provides backup power to a pair of Tunze Stream 6100s in my tank. It's designed to be minimum life support only for maximum duration.

The Streams are 45w each, but run on a controller. I estimate the average drain to be ~60w as the controller throttles them up and down. With this setup the UPS can power the tank for 3-4 hours at a stretch before running down. I had an extended 6 day outage after hurricane wilma last year, and the UPS allowed me to turn off the generator periodically (to save gas) while keeping the tank running on minimum flow.

I also have firsthand experience that the same UPS can run a 32" Toshiba HDTV and satellite box for 2 hours before it gives out. :D

If you want to maximize run time, hook the UPS to a single powerhead, I'd recommend a MJ900. That's only ~8w, so you could probably go most of the day on that load, while moving ~200gph.

Jeff
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7637096#post7637096 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by ZoeReef
I'm sure there is a savings here, but perhaps the possibility of a much greater loss. A UPS is a battery and the condition of a battery is dependent upon the conditions in which it has been used and stored. Do you have confidence that people who pawned their UPS had them fully charged up and that they are reliable? There is no way to know if they had sat unplugged in a hot garage for 2 years. A UPS is insurance. It needs to be something you can count on. FWIW...

If you make sure they work before you set them on their own, and considering they were only $10 a piece, Im not really worried. I bought 3, hooked a single MJ1200 to two units and kept the 3rd as extra.

I dont know what model or how much juice it will keep, but it ran a MJ1200 for close to 6 hours.
 
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