PC Peripherals Small UPS whose power-out alarm can be silenced?

rphair

Apprentice
I'm posting in this same category since I found a similar thread here (really helpful, but without a specific answer to this question): https://techenclave.com/threads/ups-for-someone-who-hates-apc.215197 — I need to find the cheapest & best UPS (we only need the minimum 600VA) that I can silence without melting the speaker with a soldering iron: or anything else that voids the warranty.

... i.e. a UPS that can be configured not to make that regular beeping sound when the mains power is lost (i.e. when it's delivering battery power) and not start sounding the alarm again after the mains power is restored & then goes out again... i.e. the usual behaviour of a UPS console "mute" button. I got halfway to answering this for 3 of the top vendors:

Artis - actually replied to my customer service email: agent told me they have a 600VA model with an LCD and therefore "you’ll not hear any beep sound". He attached the user manual I requested: which confirms this LCD model beeps every 10 seconds when the power goes out. :rolleyes:

I noticed Artis has a "Powersafe PRO" series with "built-in RS-232 and bundled monitoring software" which would in principle allow the power-out alarm to be configured OFF... but their sales pages don't show which of these models have a serial connection. (The agent abandoned our email conversation without answering either question.)

APC - as I recall they offer higher end UPSs that can be configured through a serial port, via management software that seems so versatile it can even configure UPSs from other vendors. I wrote to one of their more popular distributors (eStoreWale) asking which models — APC or other — are configurable, and never got a reply.

A current Amazon India page for the ubiquitous APC model BX600I-IN (slug B0DS2726PW) has in the description "w/o auto shutdown software". Since auto-shutdown would require a serial port or at least Ethernet + SNMP, this term may be a synonym for "configurable"... but unfortunately there aren't enough models on Amazon to find a configurable APC UPS there.

CyberPower - I had confirmation that the basic 600VA retail model has a "mute" button that silences the alarm... but that the alarm turns back on again after the power is restored. I emailed them as well with the same questions & of course never got a reply: which other forum threads said was typical for them.

The CyberPower web site shows impressive, free UPS configuration software ("PowerPanel") that will even run on the Linux command line if it has a compatible UPS connected serially (I guess through a computer USB port). The CLI explicitly shows 2 different commands to either temporarily or permanently disable the alarm when the mains power goes out.

So I think this need might best be met by the answer to one question: What's the smallest / cheapest CyberPower UPS that supports PowerPanel?

I also checked Zebronics, V-Guard & Microtek but none of them seemed to have any distinctive offerings. A capacity of 600VA would power my basic configuration (imagine medical monitoring equipment in a home care environment: SFF desktop, screen, network hub, and silent under all conditions), but I'd consider a higher capacity if it's the only way to get configurability.

SNMP / enterprise features would be overkill, but an Ethernet port might be nice if it also gets us a web interface to configure the device & read power-out and battery-status logs: rather than a USB hookup through an exotic, expensive serial cable.

I have some more links with details about my findings above, but this is my first posting & don't want it to be flagged... and I have a feeling this question has a generally known answer and so was hoping to hear other people's insights & experience first.
 
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CyberPower - I had confirmation that the basic 600VA retail model has a "mute" button that silences the alarm... but that the alarm turns back on again after the power is restored. I emailed them as well with the same questions & of course never got a reply: which other forum threads said was typical for them.

The CyberPower web site shows impressive, free UPS configuration software ("PowerPanel") that will even run on the Linux command line if it has a compatible UPS connected serially (I guess through a computer USB port). The CLI explicitly shows 2 different commands to either temporarily or permanently disable the alarm when the mains power goes out.

So I think this need might best be met by the answer to one question: What's the smallest / cheapest CyberPower UPS that supports PowerPanel?
I have this -
The alarm can be configured to be switched off. At least mine stays switched off even after power is restored.
The PowerPanel software is available from this model upwards -
 
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I have this one at home doing power backup of router and does not make any sound when an outage happens by default. Lasts more then a few hours typically since its barely a load for its 600VA capacity. Its one of the few available models which can do microloads(small LEDs, routers etc)

https://zebronics.com/products/zeb-mls750

It beeps ONLY when the battery is about to die OR its overloaded beyond capacity. I have been using it since corona days and have changed the battery on my own twice(does not need soldering, just clip on the terminals yourselves).

1743966364075.png
 
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thanks @ibose & @smaratha for your recommendations & experience. The most recommended small calibre UPS for silencing the alarm is in fact the CyberPower BU600E and it works exactly as everyone said.

The product manual has gone through some generations & this method of silencing the alarm is upheld in every one of them, and the "mute" procedure works for me in practice... one double-click of the power button and the "running on battery" alarm is out of your life forever: i.e. that setting does persist between power outages & is remembered when turning off the device manually.

If I were installing something a little bigger for a 2-3 computer office setup I'd love someday to get the UT1500E and try out that PowerPanel software. Thanks everyone for welcoming me to the forum & helping me solve my problem so effectively.
 
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@intruderfps I'm just testing it new & fully charged, with a modest non-gaming setup (power estimates only; I don't have an ammeter):
  • 100W = 17 inch Acer TUF gaming laptop (office use only: GPU mostly idle, display fully dimmed)
  • 50W = Asus 32 inch external monitor
  • 15W = H600GM-A PON wifi & router
and got 25½ minutes of backup from full charge at load 165W (given details in case my estimates might be wrong).
 
@intruderfps I'm just testing it new & fully charged, with a modest non-gaming setup (power estimates only; I don't have an ammeter):
  • 100W = 17 inch Acer TUF gaming laptop (office use only: GPU mostly idle, display fully dimmed)
  • 50W = Asus 32 inch external monitor
  • 15W = H600GM-A PON wifi & router
and got 25½ minutes of backup from full charge at load 165W (given details in case my estimates might be wrong).

Thanks a lot for the info. I've got meco powermeter and at ~100w constant the ups lasts only 5 mins. I think i'll need to connect with customer care.

Anyone has ideas dealing with cyberpower customer care here?
 
one double-click of the power button and the "running on battery" alarm is out of your life forever: i.e. that setting does persist between power outages & is remembered when turning off the device manually.
Important amendment to my statement above: after running down my UPS battery deliberately in testing for my last post, the on-battery alarm mute was not remembered. My guess is that the battery powers a volatile RAM that stores such settings: because deliberately turning the device off, while the battery still has charge on it, preserves the mute setting (I've just double checked this).
 
Important amendment to my statement above: after running down my UPS battery deliberately in testing for my last post, the on-battery alarm mute was not remembered. My guess is that the battery powers a volatile RAM that stores such settings: because deliberately turning the device off, while the battery still has charge on it, preserves the mute setting (I've just double checked this).
I admit I had not run down the battery to see if the mute setting is retained or not so thanks for confirming this.
 
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