Odd Shaped Power Bricks and UPS
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@BRRABill said in Odd Shaped Power Bricks and UPS:
I also got dinged for not having ceiling tiles in our wiring room.
That is normal if you have a drop ceiling. It's for a fire(smoke)/air barrier.
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I wonder if something of this sort would be allowed.... It's not a power strip. just power cords that are about a foot long to allow connection to the adapters.
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I bet they would be. I'm sure the primary concern, as Jason rightly pointed out, was the overdrawn issue.
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@gjacobse said in Odd Shaped Power Bricks and UPS:
I wonder if something of this sort would be allowed.... It's not a power strip. just power cords that are about a foot long to allow connection to the adapters.
No over current protection. Also this type device in a commerical setting falls under extension cord restrictions, which OSHA only allows temporary use of. Now if they are UL Listed for being plugged into a power strip in that manner it would be allowed.. (hence how C13 extensions are allowed) but otherwise they would have to be plugged directly into a wall outlet.
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EX: https://www.amazon.com/Solid-Cordz-Female-Extension-Cords/dp/B00CG70K78/ref=cm_cr_dp_asin_lnk
These are UL listed but likely not for that use.
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Yeah these particular switches (workgroup Cisco SG-200-8) can't take that sort of plug.
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I'm assuming @gjacobse is talking about the black cord only.
https://i.imgur.com/oCkdbBE.pngI don't know OSHA law/rules, but there should be no need to check for over current in the black part, it's a 1 to 1 connection. Assuming you plug the 1 to 1 and it's plugged directly into a UPS port, not a power strip like this picture.
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@Dashrender said in Odd Shaped Power Bricks and UPS:
I'm assuming @gjacobse is talking about the black cord only.
https://i.imgur.com/oCkdbBE.pngI don't know OSHA law/rules, but there should be no need to check for over current in the black part, it's a 1 to 1 connection. Assuming you plug the 1 to 1 and it's plugged directly into a UPS port, not a power strip like this picture.
Correct. YOu would not use the power strip as you are using an UPS. Just use the cords to connect the adapter to the UPS as normal.
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How about one of these Eaton ePDU G3 units? https://powerquality.eaton.com/ePDUG3/default.asp
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I think you've got it going the wrong way around. You should have mains power into the UPS (i.e. from the wall socket). Then IF you have to have a power board, plug that into the UPS. No power boards/strips in between the wall and UPS. Keep it simple. Less things to go pop in the night.
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@Dashrender said in Odd Shaped Power Bricks and UPS:
I'm assuming @gjacobse is talking about the black cord only.
https://i.imgur.com/oCkdbBE.pngI don't know OSHA law/rules, but there should be no need to check for over current in the black part, it's a 1 to 1 connection. Assuming you plug the 1 to 1 and it's plugged directly into a UPS port, not a power strip like this picture.
1:1 does not necessarily imply no over current protection is needed.
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@Jason said
I would replace the switches then..
Out of curiosity, what is the switch du jour these days? Was a firm decision ever made?
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@BRRABill said in Odd Shaped Power Bricks and UPS:
@Jason said
I would replace the switches then..
Out of curiosity, what is the switch du jour these days? Was a firm decision ever made?
Depends? I feel like switching has become a commodity. Ubiquiti has some nice switches, but so does Netgear.
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@BRRABill said in Odd Shaped Power Bricks and UPS:
@Jason said
I would replace the switches then..
Out of curiosity, what is the switch du jour these days? Was a firm decision ever made?
That would depend on your needs.
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@coliver said
Depends? I feel like switching has become a commodity. Ubiquiti has some nice switches, but so does Netgear.
Yeah I guess there are enough discussions about this on other threads.
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@Jason said in Odd Shaped Power Bricks and UPS:
@Dashrender said in Odd Shaped Power Bricks and UPS:
I'm assuming @gjacobse is talking about the black cord only.
https://i.imgur.com/oCkdbBE.pngI don't know OSHA law/rules, but there should be no need to check for over current in the black part, it's a 1 to 1 connection. Assuming you plug the 1 to 1 and it's plugged directly into a UPS port, not a power strip like this picture.
1:1 does not necessarily imply no over current protection is needed.
At this point the assumption would be that the UPS you're plugging into would handle that.
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@Dashrender said in Odd Shaped Power Bricks and UPS:
@Jason said in Odd Shaped Power Bricks and UPS:
@Dashrender said in Odd Shaped Power Bricks and UPS:
I'm assuming @gjacobse is talking about the black cord only.
https://i.imgur.com/oCkdbBE.pngI don't know OSHA law/rules, but there should be no need to check for over current in the black part, it's a 1 to 1 connection. Assuming you plug the 1 to 1 and it's plugged directly into a UPS port, not a power strip like this picture.
1:1 does not necessarily imply no over current protection is needed.
At this point the assumption would be that the UPS you're plugging into would handle that.
No it is not protecting the cable you plug into it, it may not be the same gauage for the amprage rating of the UPS protection. You also can't assume that. A lot of lower end UPSes do not have circuit breakers.