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Won't last in a hurricane, but it may buy you some time.
About power loss to a tank... I live in Southern California, so along with
earthquakes and fires we also now have to deal with brown outs, black outs, and power surges. The solution I found for my computers, and the one that I will be going to for my more expensive electronics like my stereo and fish tank, is to use Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) units. They normally start out around a couple hundred dollars for a small unit that will get you a half an hour, but if you do like I do and buy them at your local computer show, you can get them for around $50. Ken |
get a real small generator is your best bet,,,they power as long as you keep
them running , much better than a half hour of watching your fish slowly die! www.reeftanksonline.com "Ken" wrote in message ... About power loss to a tank... I live in Southern California, so along with earthquakes and fires we also now have to deal with brown outs, black outs, and power surges. The solution I found for my computers, and the one that I will be going to for my more expensive electronics like my stereo and fish tank, is to use Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) units. They normally start out around a couple hundred dollars for a small unit that will get you a half an hour, but if you do like I do and buy them at your local computer show, you can get them for around $50. Ken |
I use a UPS unit with one of the auxilliary pumps for the reef tank. This
way if the power goes out, at least the water will circulate for a few hours. "Rich R" wrote in message ... get a real small generator is your best bet,,,they power as long as you keep them running , much better than a half hour of watching your fish slowly die! www.reeftanksonline.com "Ken" wrote in message ... About power loss to a tank... I live in Southern California, so along with earthquakes and fires we also now have to deal with brown outs, black outs, and power surges. The solution I found for my computers, and the one that I will be going to for my more expensive electronics like my stereo and fish tank, is to use Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) units. They normally start out around a couple hundred dollars for a small unit that will get you a half an hour, but if you do like I do and buy them at your local computer show, you can get them for around $50. Ken |
show, you can get them for around $50. A UPS has a limited time it will run (especially a $50 one). That limits its usefulness. For long power outages, you will run out of juice and your tank will start experiencing problems. For short outages, it won't make any real differences. For medium length outages it will. But these I believe are the least likely. By this I mean your more likely to have a 0-5 minute outage (not problem to tank) or many hours to days (your UPS goes dead long before it is over). You should be able to request from your power company (or find on their web site) the duration's of there outages to verify this. A generator will be able to last as long as you have gas. If you don't want to buy a generator, but use the UPS you setup, I would recommend you plug in as little as possible. A heater and small pump, most likely. |
On Wed, 5 Jan 2005 08:31:00 -0500, "Rich R"
wrote: Yea that works I guess as long as its not to long, I rather not worry about it and have a generator www.reeftanksonline.com I have both. :) I also have a 1500 watt inverter with a slew of large truck batteries. |
From what I have heard, a computer UPS lasts a surprisingly short period of
time. Much less that you would expect if you calculate the number of watts of load vs. the battery capacity. As in 20 minutes or so for a small powerhead. I think the inverter is not efficient at supplying small amounts of power. "Henry Etteldorf" wrote in message m... show, you can get them for around $50. A UPS has a limited time it will run (especially a $50 one). That limits its usefulness. For long power outages, you will run out of juice and your tank will start experiencing problems. For short outages, it won't make any real differences. For medium length outages it will. But these I believe are the least likely. By this I mean your more likely to have a 0-5 minute outage (not problem to tank) or many hours to days (your UPS goes dead long before it is over). You should be able to request from your power company (or find on their web site) the duration's of there outages to verify this. A generator will be able to last as long as you have gas. If you don't want to buy a generator, but use the UPS you setup, I would recommend you plug in as little as possible. A heater and small pump, most likely. |
Here in Southern California we typically have power outages about once or
twice a year, typically from a few minutes to a few hours. It usually does not go beyond a half a day. In this case having a UPS with an auxilliary pump has worked quite well to fill in for this intermediate outage timeframe. "Henry Etteldorf" wrote in message m... show, you can get them for around $50. A UPS has a limited time it will run (especially a $50 one). That limits its usefulness. For long power outages, you will run out of juice and your tank will start experiencing problems. For short outages, it won't make any real differences. For medium length outages it will. But these I believe are the least likely. By this I mean your more likely to have a 0-5 minute outage (not problem to tank) or many hours to days (your UPS goes dead long before it is over). You should be able to request from your power company (or find on their web site) the duration's of there outages to verify this. A generator will be able to last as long as you have gas. If you don't want to buy a generator, but use the UPS you setup, I would recommend you plug in as little as possible. A heater and small pump, most likely. |
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