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Hardware Support Discussions related to using various hardware setups with SageTV products. Anything relating to capture cards, remotes, infrared receivers/transmitters, system compatibility or other hardware related problems or suggestions should be posted here. |
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Headless Server: Worth A UPS?
My SageTV server is about to take up residence in the rec room's closet - along with Verizon's power box, a router, a switch, and a couple of HD HomeRun tuner boxes.
Question: What's the consensus of the value of a UPS in there? The assumption being that the UPS would talk to the server and initiate a graceful, totally unattended shutdown in event of power failure. On one hand, I think "It's just television, who cares?" On the other hand, although I've never had a Windows XP problem from pulling the plug on a PC yet; the cynic in me says that the first time the power goes out I'll have some kind of major drive/system corruption as a result of a power loss. Is it a no-brainer either way? Opinions?
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Server: SageTV 9, Windows 10, i5 NUC Clients: HD200*3 over Cat5e Ethernet + 1 slightly flakey HD 300 + 1 HD200 remote at another residence Plugins: (none yet, looking for recommendations) Storage: NetGear Ultra-6 NAS 10 TB total w/dual redundancy. Plus 5tb QNAP for RecordedTV. Capture: 3 Silicon Dust HomeRun tuner boxes (6 tuners total) Program Source: OTA antenna |
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#3
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I'd never NOT have a PC on a UPS, they're way to cheap to not have one these days.
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#4
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A good UPS is the best insurance you can buy for any electronic equipment.
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#5
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I recently added UPS mainly because the risk of file corruption in case of power failure and to avoid lenghty fcsk.
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TV: Samsung UN46D8000 Server: Intel Core i3 540, 4G RAM, Matrox G450, 70GB EXT3 encrypted software RAID1 system drive, 1TB XFS tv recording drive, 2TB EXT3 encrypted data drive mirror across 2 machines, 2TB EXT3 encrypted media drive mirror across 2 machines, CentOS 6 64 bit, Experimenting with DNLA servers 1Gb wired network Disconnected after G day[HD 100 Media Extender, Placeshifter 7.x, SageTV 7.x, HDHomeRun] |
#6
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I have my entire AV rack on UPS, including STBs, receivers, amps, routers and switches, as well as my Sage server. A good UPS can extend the life of your equipment by protecting against overvoltage and brownouts in addition to actual outages. Think of it as a voltage regulator for your AC supply (which is very poorly regulated by the utility).
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-- Greg |
#7
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Quote:
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Sage Server: SageTV v7.0.21WHS MB/CPU/RAM: Asus A8N5X NF4; Athlon64 X2 4200; 3GB RAM OS: WHS PP3 Capture: 1 x HDHR (Both tuning QAM); 1 x HD-PVR C2 (Component to Moto DCH-3200 - Channel change via Firewire); Extenders: 2 x STX-HD100; 1 x HD-300 (Panny G20 50" Plasma, Sony 32" LCD, Sammy 26 " LCD) |
#8
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You should at least put a cheap UPS on the computer. I put a UPS on my SageTV computer about a year ago, and I've already had about a dozen small electrical outages since then.
If you have set top boxes, they should also be plugged into the UPS. It's a good idea to have a UPS on at least one TV. If you have severe weather that also takes out your electrical power, you can still get the weather info on TV during the electrical outage. You could get the info with a portable radio, but you wouldn't get the weather radar and TV stations cover weather events better, while radio stations are just playing music or syndicated programs. Dave |
#9
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i always use a UPS simply for line conditioning.
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MacBook Core2Duo 2 ghz nVidia 9400M GPU 46" Sammy HLP4663 720p DLP 2x HDHR, all OTA QNAP TS-809: 12.5 TB for Recordings/Imports/TimeMachine/Music HD200 via 802.11n in Living Room 802.11n client in bedroom |
#10
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That would have to be one of the higher-end ones that runs the inverter all the time - instead of just cutting over in event of a power failure, right?
Or are the cutover types sensitive enough to also protect against spikes?
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Server: SageTV 9, Windows 10, i5 NUC Clients: HD200*3 over Cat5e Ethernet + 1 slightly flakey HD 300 + 1 HD200 remote at another residence Plugins: (none yet, looking for recommendations) Storage: NetGear Ultra-6 NAS 10 TB total w/dual redundancy. Plus 5tb QNAP for RecordedTV. Capture: 3 Silicon Dust HomeRun tuner boxes (6 tuners total) Program Source: OTA antenna |
#11
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IMHO anything with a hard drive in it should be on a UPS.
It's also a good idea for anything with a bulb in it (eg DLP HDTV). |
#12
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I used to have one on my DLP, however there's a problem with connecting a UPS to a device that can't talk to it. Once the computer shuts down the UPS switches off. However with a TV or similar the UPS will remain on till the battery dies or you switch it off. So if the power dies while you're not home the UPS will provide standby power to the TV till the battery dies. This tends to severely shorten the life of the battery. The UPS I had on that device wouldn't hold a charge after about the second time this happened.
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Server: Core 2 Duo E4200 2 GB RAM, nVidia 6200LE, 480 GB in pool, 500GB WHS backup drive, 1x750 GB & 1x1TB Sage drives, Hauppage HVR-1600, HD PVR, Windows Home Server SP2 Media center: 46" Samsung DLP, HD-100 extender. Gaming: Intel Core2 Duo E7300, 4GB RAM, ATI HD3870, Intel X-25M G2 80GB SSD, 200 & 120 GB HDD, 23" Dell LCD, Windows 7 Home Premium. Laptop: HP dm3z, AMD (1.6 GHz) 4 GB RAM, 60 GB OCZ SSD, AMD HD3200 graphics, 13.3" widescreen LCD, Windows 7 x64/Sage placeshifter. |
#13
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#14
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I use a UPS on all my PCs because it protects my physical equipment. I've had brownouts that toasted the UPS but my equipment was fine. On one brownout my DH's laptop port replicator was fried (he didn't have it plugged into the UPS) and it slightly scrambled the laptop.
Prior to using UPSs I had equipment failures even though I was using a surge protector. I live in a suburb of Washington DC with underground utilities but I still have a lot of electrical problems. UPSs fix that.
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Server: Windows 8x64, ASUS P8 H67-M Pro Micro ATX, Core i5, 8 RAM, 14TB running latest Sage Clients: HD200, HD300, Win7 Desktop Capture Devices: Hauppauge Colossus & 1 HDHR, TV Service: Verizon FIOS |
#15
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Just get a UPS that has AVR (auto voltage regulation). That will protect against brown outs and whatnot. I'd also looking into the UPS's line conditioning capabilities if it's beyond AVR. Some one them can not only adjsut voltage but also make sure you are at exactly 60Hz.
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#16
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#17
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Here's a straw man for my proposed requriements.
I would look for the most el-cheapo unit that meets them: ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 1) Ability to tell the PC that it's on backup power so it can initiate immediate shutdown. I'm not interested keeping it running. Got a generator for that, just in keeping it alive long enough for a graceful shutdown. 2) Uses non-proprietary battery/batteries that are available at the local Radio Shack store. No trying to fake out a proprietary harness... just plug-and-play. 3) Sufficient capacity to keep 600 watts going for 20 minutes. Not four or five minutes bc the battery is going to deteriorate over time. Would anybody go for more than 20 minutes? Is 600 watts a reasonable figure given that the server has a 500-watt power supply which I assume is not running at capacity. Beyond the server, there's a gigabit/WiFiN router, a 10/100, non-WiFi router, two HD HomeRun tuners, and a gigabit switch. 4) Auto Voltage Regulation. -----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Server: SageTV 9, Windows 10, i5 NUC Clients: HD200*3 over Cat5e Ethernet + 1 slightly flakey HD 300 + 1 HD200 remote at another residence Plugins: (none yet, looking for recommendations) Storage: NetGear Ultra-6 NAS 10 TB total w/dual redundancy. Plus 5tb QNAP for RecordedTV. Capture: 3 Silicon Dust HomeRun tuner boxes (6 tuners total) Program Source: OTA antenna |
#18
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1) You can set it to shut down on battery power, or say "shut down when you N minutes left and can shutdown gracefully"
2) Not going to happen. Your best bet is to just get an APC and look up the battery type on the internet for a replacement. It'll last 2-3 years no problem. Battery size is not a problem....they all deteriorate over time. 3) I think I got the APC 900 something or other AmpHours or Watt hours..something. Honestly, my server with a 650W PSU, Quad core Q9450, 4G RAM, 9 hard drives only draws about 150 Watts in steady state. At least that is what the UPS tells me. 4) a must. |
#19
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Might be worth spending the $20 on a kill-a-watt or it's equivalent. That will tell you for certain how much current these devices are pulling, then you can size from there.
I know my UPS pulls between 110~210 watts from the wall depending on what the computer is doing. This includes the server, an external HDD, a cable modem, a wireless router, and a gigabit switch. Not all of these are on the battery backup, only the CPU, external HDD. The other three pull from the non-battery side of the UPS since I don't care if they go down when the power fails. But they also barely contribute to the total load. I've found many of the sealed batteries used by the UPS makers are not really unique. It's just that most are not carried in a lot of places. The last time I had to get a replacement the local battery warehouse had them available or could order them. They were a standard sealed lead-acid battery size. Radio Shack actually carried the smaller one, though they wanted almost as much as I paid for the UPS for it.
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Server: Core 2 Duo E4200 2 GB RAM, nVidia 6200LE, 480 GB in pool, 500GB WHS backup drive, 1x750 GB & 1x1TB Sage drives, Hauppage HVR-1600, HD PVR, Windows Home Server SP2 Media center: 46" Samsung DLP, HD-100 extender. Gaming: Intel Core2 Duo E7300, 4GB RAM, ATI HD3870, Intel X-25M G2 80GB SSD, 200 & 120 GB HDD, 23" Dell LCD, Windows 7 Home Premium. Laptop: HP dm3z, AMD (1.6 GHz) 4 GB RAM, 60 GB OCZ SSD, AMD HD3200 graphics, 13.3" widescreen LCD, Windows 7 x64/Sage placeshifter. |
#20
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Every UPS I've owned, and I've owned over a dozen over the years from multiple manufacturers, have all used the same basic battery type. It's a 12v rechargeable, and I usually get them at Fry's. Some of the larger UPS's use two of them.
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