Hi,
We have a generator, so I never really have to worry about losing power. However, it takes 20-30 seconds for the generator to kick in, which means I still lose all my work on the computer and stuff.
I figured, now that UPS units aren't too expensive, I can buy the cheapest one I can find (as it only needs to work for up to 30 seconds - I don't care how many minutes the battery lasts)... but I was a bit confused about the watt and volt-amp ratings.
After doing some Googling, I found out what the difference is.
However, I don't know what the actual Watt rating of my PC is. I have a 450W power supply unit, but I know it's not using all of it. I previously had a 200W unit that worked fine, and when I added another IDE hard drive it wouldn't start. Now, I don't know how many watts your average hard drive uses - but I doubt it'll knock it up to 450W
So what I need to know is, how do you find out how many watts your computer is actually using? CPU-Z didn't say, and I don't know if it's even possible.
I was looking at this unit, but wasn't sure if it's powerful enough since it's only 230W.
On a side note - does anyone know how many watts your average clock radio uses? It would be nice to put that on a UPS as well so I don't have to keep resetting the time
We have a generator, so I never really have to worry about losing power. However, it takes 20-30 seconds for the generator to kick in, which means I still lose all my work on the computer and stuff.
I figured, now that UPS units aren't too expensive, I can buy the cheapest one I can find (as it only needs to work for up to 30 seconds - I don't care how many minutes the battery lasts)... but I was a bit confused about the watt and volt-amp ratings.
After doing some Googling, I found out what the difference is.
However, I don't know what the actual Watt rating of my PC is. I have a 450W power supply unit, but I know it's not using all of it. I previously had a 200W unit that worked fine, and when I added another IDE hard drive it wouldn't start. Now, I don't know how many watts your average hard drive uses - but I doubt it'll knock it up to 450W
So what I need to know is, how do you find out how many watts your computer is actually using? CPU-Z didn't say, and I don't know if it's even possible.
I was looking at this unit, but wasn't sure if it's powerful enough since it's only 230W.
On a side note - does anyone know how many watts your average clock radio uses? It would be nice to put that on a UPS as well so I don't have to keep resetting the time
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