• Reviews around drive (1.31 of 5)

    CyberPower CP1500PFCLCD PFC Sinewave UPS System, 1500VA/900W, 10 Outlets, AVR, Mini-Tower

    • Powered a high-end gaming rig (2 2080TIs, 10 hard drives, 32GB Ram, 1200w Power Supply) & like 9 other devices during that time
    • During a power failure it has keep my network router, ADT pulse router, Arlo base station, modem, web power switch, NAS and a couple of external hard drives powered for about 1.5 hours.
    • Anyway I enjoy the peace of mind of knowing that another power failure won't scramble my hard drives.
    • and I once had flood and everything on the floor (back up hard drives, computers) were lost
    • It must operate by polling instead of being interrupt-driven, which is poor software design.
    • It can power a stack of maybe ten hard drives and a large monitor with ease off battery for about 10 mins - plenty of time to save and shutdown.
    • I have a high end i7 core quad processor/computer, two monitors, a sound system, 6 hard drives and an external Blu-ray burner plugged in to this CyberPower unit
    • If the power turns off when the console is using it's hard drive, it can ruin your data (same thing for a computer, even an SSD).
    • No more problems with the Satellite box having to reacquire signal or the playstation 4 having to go thru a hard drive error check everytime the power would flash
    • On my Dell XPS tower with 2 internal hard drives and 2 large monitors, it says I have about 10 minutes of runtime (love the front LCD display!), which is more than enough time to save my work and shut down the computer properly.
    • With a custom built gaming PC, monitor, external hard drive, and a couple other things plugged in, it said it had roughly 155 minutes on battery left.
    • So they would NOT WARRANTY my fried computer, hard drive and hard drive backup
    • Well, it turns out that when I added more hard drives to my NAS, the power supply couldn't handle it and it shorted out
    • Nice not having to worry about crashing my 10 4TB drives during a power outage
    • I have several pieces of expensive Audio and Video components in my Entertainment Center and an X Box 360 Gaming Console with a 250 GB Hard Drive
    • Works, it estimates around 21 minutes on my Phenom II quad core, 3x hard drives, a NAS with 4x hard drives, modem, wireless router, and a 23" LCD.
    • Works, it estimates around 21 minutes on my Phenom II quad core, 3x hard drives, a NAS with 4x hard drives, modem, wireless router, and a 23" LCD.
    • Yep, very useful sinewave output for driving inductive loads like blower motors in pellet stoves.
    • Power surges killed four external hard drives, a sound card, and a speaker system before installing this UPS
    • Several printers (in standby mode), including an Epson all-in-oneWith this load, the UPS estimates available battery run time at 100-120 minutes (it jumps around a bit as hard drives spin up & down, etc.).
    • With just a laptop, cable modem and a number of hard drives and USB devices it should run for an hour or so quite easily.
    • I have a 27" iMac, a 24" external monitor and a couple hard drives all connected and the display on the
    • turning off these drives is one thing [typically, 'powering-down' involves some Process shutdown processes when the power switch is moved to OFF], but sudden power loss can damage hardware and software components and shorten their lives
    • For reference, my computer is newly built with a 6-core Intel I7 processor, 32 GB of RAM, two SSDs, and no spinning hard drives.
    • I have three monitors, a powerful loaded I7 PC with 3 hard drives and a laptop running flawlessly
    • My older version is the backup power for my DVR and its external hard drive - it just has to last long enough for the generator to be running (I use a Yamaha inverter generator - a must if you are powering AV equipment)
    • Anyway I enjoy the peace of mind of knowing that another power failure won't scramble my hard drives.
    • one SSD and five ordinary hard drives.
    • We have 2 Dell desktop towers, 2 external hard drives, 2 monitors, a cable modem, and a WiFi router all plugged into the battery/surge outlets with only ~20% load
    • A pc crash of the windows program is bad real bad or even a crash on my 2TB hard drive
    • supply• An ASUS Z87-A motherboard with a 1GB LAN controller• Two large 27” monitors• A couple hard drives and no other cardsI live in an area where there are frequent electrical storms in the spring and occasional power
    • Love the static memory drive (??
    • I use that battery port extension for internet modem, network switch, and a backup hard drive which I only turn on for manual backups
    • I will be adding another CyberPower unit to protect remote back-up drives, router, security systems, etc.
    • I'm using this to power my Dell XPS 27 with all the bells and whistles, a canon all-in-one printer/copier/scanner/fax, Western Digital desktop external hard drive, and 2 other hard drives attached to the computer
    • It has enough capacity to power my computer, monitor, and external hard drive for 15-20 minutes during a power failure
    • I currently have it supporting a Mac Mini Server, and three hard drives, which is well under the maximum supported wattage this handles.
    • UPS does a great job protecting the attached computers, monitors and hard drives.
    • I wanted the best equipment I could afford, computers and external hard drives, scanner, printers and so forth
    • Because of this, i was able to turn on performance mode on my hard drive array because I don't need to worry about cache flushing in case of power outage.
    • (i7 4790k, 16GB RAM, 980ti, 3 hard drives, etc).I noticed that it didn't say it was charging, and realized I didn't plug in the UPS to power!I haven't had any issues with
    • Love the static memory drive (??